INTERACTIVE HOMEPAGE OF NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION
Kim Fagerudd and Eija Koskivaara
Kemisk-Tekniska Fakulteten, Åbo Akademi Univeristy, Turku School of Economics
Rehtorin pellonkatu 3, 20540 Turku, Finland
Keywords: Non-profit organisation, sport, well-being, homepage.
Abstract: This paper presents how local orienteering club with the interactive homepage attract new members, and
communicate with people interested in or involve with the club. Especially, the children and youth sector is
presented. This communication way is important in the city, where orienteering places are around the city
and surroundings. Orienteering really is a hobby for the whole family – a real sport for all who wants to
promote physical activity with metal and social well-being. It can be practised almost anywhere in the
world, in all kinds of terrain from parks to woods. A map and a compass, and suitable outdoor clothes are all
you need to get started. Orienteers navigate their way round a with the map and compass. To reach
orienteering places is challenging, especially for newcomers, as the physical activity place changes almost
every time, otherwise orienteer’s learns the terrain too well and the mental feedback is not so rewarding
anymore. The interactive homepage of youth sector have eight items.
1 INTRODUCTION
The non-profit organisations exist because they can
better provide, compared to business and public
sector organisations, services and goods that, are
difficult to charge on economically appropriate price
(Barrett, Balloun & Weinstein 2005). Voluntary
activities form the basis of the Finnish Sports culture
and traditionally sports clubs are organised in non-
profit associations (SLU 2006). Orienteering is a
good example of physical activity, where the total
amount of work needed to organise an orienteering
exercise or competition is huge and challenging,
including such thing as map-making and course
setting, and therefore very seldom orienteering is
economically profitable. And, at the same time,
orienteering really is a hobby for the whole family
a real sport for all who wants to promote physical
activity with metal and social well-being. It can be
practised almost anywhere in the world, in all kinds
of terrain from parks to woods. A map and a
compass, and suitable outdoor clothes are all you
need to get started. Orienteers navigate their way
round a with the map and compass.(IOF 2006)
Therefore, orienteering society has room for
motivated and creative persons (Amabile 1998) in
order to keep the sport going on.
In the last few decades, advances in information
technologies and the adoption of the Internet in
particular have attracted the attention of many
academics and practitioners alike. Much of current
research, however, is focused on for-profit
organisations, and less emphasis has been placed on
other organisational contexts, such as the non-profit
sector. The purpose of this article is to analyse how
orienteering club Turun Suunnistajat ry (TuS) with
the interactive homepage (www.turunsuunnistajat.fi)
attract new members, and communicate with people
interested in or involve with the club (TuS 2006).
This communication way is important in the city,
where orienteering places are around the city and
surroundings. To reach orienteering places is
challenging, especially for newcomers, as the
physical activity place changes almost every time,
otherwise orienteer’s learns the terrain too well and
the mental feedback is not so rewarding anymore.
This paper focus on how the interactive
homepage can promote the mission (Mullen 2006)
of the club and support the voluntary work of club
(Sawhney, Wolcott & Arroniz 2006). The article
proceeds as follows. Section 2 gives an overview of
TuS and the use and adaptation of information and
communication technologies (ICT) in orienteering in
general. Section 3 analyses the interactive homepage
of TuS especially focusing on Youth sector. The
175
Fagerudd K. and Koskivaara E. (2007).
INTERACTIVE HOMEPAGE OF NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION.
In Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies - Society, e-Business and e-Government /
e-Learning, pages 175-178
DOI: 10.5220/0001290001750178
Copyright
c
SciTePress
analysis is based on the instrument developed
specially on Web portals quality measurement
(Yang, Cai, Zhou & Zhou 2005). Section 4 suggest
further development issues for the promoting
orienteering and other sports clubs’ mission in order
to physical activity with mental and social well-
being.
2 CASE CLUB AND ICT IN
ORIENTEERING
TuS is a non-profit organisation with over 500
hundred members living in more than 20 different
municipalities in Finland. Over 300 members have
competition license of Finnish Orienteering
Federation (SSL 2006). TuS’s primary mission is to
promote the sport of orienteering in Turku area. TuS
is very active with a lot of trainings and activities in
the region around Turku. TuS is one of the most
colourful orienteering clubs at the moment and
joining the club is easy. In the spring 2006 TuS
achieved The Young Finland Association’s Seal
Club certificate for it’s quality of activities for
children and youth (Nuori_Suomi 2006).
TuS organisation is divided into four sectors:
competitions, elite, youth, and exerciser sectors.
Almost all the work is done on voluntary basis by
club members, and the different sectors help each
other. This kind of voluntary working is very
traditional in Scandinavian sport and physical
activity clubs. For example, in other Western
European countries sport is organised more on
company basis.
Information and communication technology
(ICT) has brought significant changes in the
structure and functioning of orienteering during the
past decade. The core element of orienteering, map,
is digitalized. From this follows that also course
setting is digitalized. Indeed, the time taking system,
emit™ or SportIdent™, with time analysis of the
competions are over ten years old. Combining
digital map, on-line time taking and a Global
Positioning System-based trucking system and
software reveals the routes of runners as well as the
differences between competitors online. This kind of
system is already in use in some competitions. There
are less and less secrets, if the system is fully utilised
and especially the audience really may follow the
race. Also very many administrative things such as
registration for competition or information about
different kind of activities are digitalized and moved
into www-environment. Not to mentioned all kind of
normal registration and administrative systems used
in the office work. We may conclude that the
adoption of ICT in orienteering at least in the best
clubs seems to be high. According to (Finn, Maher
& Forster 2006) the non-profit organisations are in
the beginning to position themselves to take
advantage of the opportunities provided by ICT
adoption. (Pinho & Macedo 2006) found that the
existence of a favourable attitude towards the
Internet was positively correlated with the
perception of Internet benefit dimensions. It seems
that the innovative and creative climate in
orienteering society have managed to create an
environment which support the whole sport (Hamm
2006). Explanation for this kind of team effect might
lie partly in the military sport background of the
sport and partly high educational level of the
participants of the orienteering sport. Indeed, quite a
many of orienteering are engineers.
3 THE INTERACTIVE
HOMEPAGE OF TUS
Increasing numbers of non-profit organisations have
set up material on their homepage as a way of
providing users with information about their
products or services. This section analysis the
interactive homepage of TuS, special focus is on
youth sector, with the instrument to measure user
perceived service quality of homepage. The
interactive homepage of youth sector have eight
items: youth news, group presentation, activity
calendar, junior presentation, question of the week,
youth activity, rules of the game, and contact
information. The analysis instrument is developed
by (Yang et al. 2005) and it based on TAM-model
(Davis 1989), which suggest that user’s decision to
adopt an IT is primary determined by their attitude
toward usefulness and ease of use. (Yang et al.
2005) argues that their conceptual model provides a
useful instrument for researchers who wish to
measure the service quality of web portal
(homepage) and for managers who want to improve
their service performance. They argue that there are
five quality dimensions of homepage: usability,
usefulness of content, adequacy of information,
accessibility, and interaction. In the following
paragraphs we analyse TuS homepage with the
special focus on youth sector with these dimensions
(Yang et al. 2005). The emphasis in the analysis is in
the fact that the members of the youth committee are
totally voluntary workers.
WEBIST 2007 - International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies
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Usability in the homepage context is related to
user friendliness. The friendliness contains e.g. the
following items: content layout and classification,
web site structure, user interface, appearance and
visual design, intuitiveness, readability, search
facilities, and ease of navigation. Technical features
belong also to usability dimensions. The TuS
homepage is organised according to club’s main
sectors and activities. These are organised in six
different menus in the upper edge of the main page.
They are: general information of the club, arranging
competitions to orienteers in other clubs, elite
athletics, youth, and links (see Figure 1). The main
layout of the page has three categories such as
interactive part on the left, news in the middle, and
logos and links of the co-operating partner on the
right side. On the left side of the page is login link
for the club members. From the menu available only
for club member can be found several useful
information about the club (Intranet and members
own settings) and the possibilities to upload
information and news into the homepage and update
the activity calendar. Webmaster has his/her own
menu to control the functionality of the homepage.
On the left side of the homepage is also the calendar,
which shows the weekly program of the whole club.
News and calendar can easily sort by the activity or
sector. The homepage is based on PHP-language and
they use MySQL-database. PHP is an HTML-
embedded scripting language. Much of its syntax is
borrowed from C, Java and Perl with a couple of
unique PHP-specific features thrown in. The goal of
the language is to allow web developers to write
dynamically generated pages quickly. PHP/MySQL
makes the homepage easy, clear, and quick to
download. The layout of the homepage is read from
template folder, which makes customising quite
easy. The functional and design code for the
homepage are diverged. More detailed information
about the technical can be found from the serves
provider’s homepage (Clubpage 2006). There is no
search facility in TuS homepage as there still are less
than one hundred pages overall, which is one rule of
thumb for specific search facilities.
Figure 1: Content layout of TuS main page.
Usefulness of content refers to the value,
reliability and accuracy of information. Every sector
of the club, i.e. the voluntary workers or club
members, are responsible to update the information
related to their activities. For example, Youth news
tell the recent happenings of the young athletes. It is
like e-Newspaper and everybody may contribute the
content. Especially, members of the youth
committee are responsible to keep the information
updated. The group presentation tells the general
information how the youth sector operates. Youth
activity and rules of the game presents the values
behind the operation. The rules of the game are
made up with children and their parents. These latter
two items are partly focused on the promotion of the
mission of the youth sector. Activity calendar tells
all the activities of the club and it is possible to make
inquiries based on year, month, category (elite
runners, youth, hobbyist, all, and club house). The
activity calendar also contains the maps of the city in
order to help new comers to find the place of
activity. The TuS homepage is updated almost daily,
thanks to active club members.
Adequacy of information is concerned with
completeness of information. The current homepage
in at the moment one year old and there are over 200
submissions of the news. The completeness of the
information is very much depending of the time,
competence, and attitude of the club members
(voluntary workers) to provide information to the
homepage.
Accessibility refers to availability and
responsiveness. Customers expect the online
services to be available at all times and speedy on
processes. The person in charge in the different
sectors answers the questions as soon as possible
regarding their work and other responsibilities. The
main language of the TuS Homepage is Finnish, but
as much as possible is also translated in English in
order to higher the accessibility of the club among
non-Finns.
Interaction involves three types of operations
between: user and service provider, user and web
site, and among peer users of similar services. The
web master, voluntary worker) of the homepage is
responsible person to communicate with the service
provider. The web master helps the members to
upload the information on the main menus.
However, the idea is that the uploading of
information is possible without any help. All the
registered club members are allowed to upload news
and activities for the calendar. In junior presentation
every young athlete may have their own diary,
guestbook, and collection of training hours to share
INTERACTIVE HOMEPAGE OF NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION
177
with others. Question of the week deals with the
content of orienteering and there are three possible
answers. The response is given weekly in face-to-
face activity. This is one way to combine both the
new media and traditional way doing and exercising
orienteering. Furthermore, the homepage includes
link to the e-Registration of competition as well as
the links for the competitions and the local
orienteering activities.
4 CONCLUSIONS
In this paper we have presented how local
orienteering club promote it’s mission with the help
of interactive homepage. The homepage was
analysed with the help of five quality dimensions
such as usability, usefulness of content, adequacy of
information, accessibility, and interaction.
The usability lies heavily on content layout and
technical functionality of the homepage. TuS
homepage uses PHP/MySQL-combinaton which
makes the homepage easy, clear, and quick to
download. However, the service provider is a tiny
company and the web master of TuS homepage
works on voluntary basis. These two things make the
service very vulnerable and have to take account in
the future planning of the homepage. Usefulness of
the content as well as the adequacy of the
information and accessibility deeply depends on
voluntary workers of the sector. This means that
every sector have to understand also the power of
new media to promote orienteering. Interaction
depends a great deal on how useful and updated the
information at the homepage is for both club
members as well as newcomers. For non-profit
organisation this is a challenge. However, if people
are motivated and the tasks are not too demanding
we think the interactive homepage works within the
non-profit sector’s organisation.
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