Organizers are increasingly being asked
to do more with less.
~65%
of organizers worry about capacity with growing community demands as budgets dwindle
>50%
of organizers reported not
having at least some data needs
met with existing tools
>50%
of organizers want more
or better collaboration
across organizations
Based on varied survey data about non-profits and organizers from Urban Institute '25 and rePower '22.
makeContact helps organizers do more with less
Through robust tooling designed with organizers and a connected ecosystem, makeContact helps organizers streamline workflows, collect better data, and expand their reach.

Use Better Tools to Offer Support
Ditch the stale spreadsheets, noisy social media platforms, tools used for party planning, and unstructured communication platfoms. Use makeContact to seamlessly organize support, deploy services, and share information in a way that is intuitive for your community.

Make Data-Driven Decisions
Unlike traditional point solutions, makeContact is designed for communities as a whole—with tooling that connects an is individualized for both organizers and community members. As an organizer, this gives you real-time data about the effectiveness of your offerings so you can rapidly evolve to support community needs.

Access a Shared Community
When you offer your services through makeContact, they automatically populate on a localized feed for anyone in your area—not just your member base—to access. Expand your limited member base and followers to maximize your impact and support.

Build Transparency with Partners
Collaborating within an organization is challenging, let alone across organizations. Coalitions and partnerships require significant effort, but with makeContact, you can stay up-to-date on your fellow organizers' initiatives to improve collaboration, reduce redundancy, and optimize impact.
Select an organizer plan that fits your needs
Whether you're a part-time organizer just trying out the platform or an organizing team working with multiple organizations, makeContact is designed to fit your specific needs.
Basic
Available for individual organizers and informal groups who need core tooling to offer services, share resources, and keep existing members informed.
Key Features:
-
1 user license
-
Create and manage services
-
Automated post-service feedback collection
-
Limited access to community feed
-
Post up to 4 services/month
-
Set custom service areas
-
Create public organization profile
Pro
Recommended for professional organizers and organizations with multiple providers or coordinators offering support.
Everything you get on basic, and:
-
Up to 5 licenses: allows multiple team members access to shared space
-
Set team permissions and roles
-
Ability to become a verified* organization and expand community reach for all service types
-
Unlimited service postings
Enterprise
Recommended for umbrella organizations, chapter-based associations, corporate giving programs, government agencies, and large organizations.
Everything you get on Pro, and:
-
Custom license count
-
Umbrella dashboard
-
Cross-organization collaboration spaces
-
+ more (TBA)
*get in touch if for early interest
How makeContact is different
With makeContact, organizers no longer need to stitch together individual point solutions or rely solely on social media to connect with their community.
Lightweight,
easy to deploy
makeContact is a high velocity tool requiring minimal setup and resourcing to deploy
Integration-friendly, modular tooling
Use makeContact to evolve your workflow and tooling for both efficiency and effectiveness
Built for coordinators, made for communities
makeContact is co-created with real service coordinators, providers, and survivors of crisis
Designed for long-term community engagement
Permanent infrastructure for your locale in which organizers can ramp up and down supports
Dynamic features,
fit for your context
Designed for individuals & teams, urban & rural settings, and everyday & crisis connection
Tooled for connecting community silos
makeContact breaks silos between partner organizers and the organizer-community divide