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GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Donald Lobo

Implementor, Developer

CiviCRM LLC

http://civicrm.org

Still thinking of a deep deep quote. Basically:

It is super important for non-profits, advocacy and related groups to take charge of their destiny. Having control of your data is a good start. The crowd-sourced nature of an open source project in so in line with the co-operation and principles of most non-profits

CiviCRM is a project that strives to make the above possible. It is FREE as in kittens.

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Robyn Perry

End-user, Administrator, Trainer

Progressive Technology Project

http://progressivetech.org

CiviCRM is helping us serve member-based community organizing groups across the
U.S. to keep better track of their events, fundraising, and membership data. It's helping our community to aim higher in terms of what kind of questions they should be asking and what kind of data they should be collecting. We chose CiviCRM because it's the best all-around tool to do what our groups need, AND because it's open source.

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Arthur Richards

DEVELOPER

WIKIMEDIA FOUNDATION

http://wikimediafoundation.org

At the Wikimedia Foundation, we leverage CiviCRM to maintain millions of records of donors and their contributions. Working with the product and particularly with the community has been a terrific experience. There's nothing quite like two open source organizations working together to meet their respective goals while ultimately strengthening the open source community as a whole.

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Coleman Watts

End-user and Developer

Woolman Sierra Friends Center

http://woolman.org

If it weren't for CiviCRM we'd be using at least 5 different
systems for Woolman: one for donor management, another for email newsletters, a third for our school enrollment, a fourth for our summer camp registration, and then a whole bunch of spreadsheets for keeping track of things like event attendance, prospective students, CSA memberships, etc. And of course none of those systems would talk to each other or make it possible to get a whole picture of the many ways one person might participate in our education center's activities. Migrating all of our scattered data and disparate systems to CiviCRM was a long and challenging process, but the results have been more than worth it. Our ability to track and report on our programs has improved dramatically, while the burden on staff to do data entry has been greatly reduced, and our participants are happy that they can now register/enroll online rather than mailing or faxing paper forms.

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Alejandro Salgado

Implementor, Consultant

iXiam

http://www.ixiam.com/en

We help organizations with their CiviCRM Projects. From Business consultancy to custom CiviCRM development.

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Andrew Perry

Implementor, Developer, Integrator

Community Builders Australia

http://www.communitybuilders.com.au

CiviCRM enables us and our clients to invest precious funds into configuring the CRM to meet organisational needs, and building innovative new features, rather than paying annual license fees. With access to the source code and tight integration with leading website content management systems, CiviCRM is extremely flexible.

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Joe Murray

Consultant, Implementor, Developer, Trainer

JMA Consulting

CiviCRM is a great solution for non-profits looking to integrate their fundraising, event, membership, grant and email management systems. JMA Consulting is a leader in developing extensions and core contributions for CiviCRM.

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Xavier Dutoit

Developer and Implementor

Tech to the People

http://techtothepeople.com

Over the past 15 years I've been involved in several open source communities.
CiviCRM is without any doubt the one that has the strongest focus in welcoming "newbies" and letting everyone feel at home here. Another impressive feature is the focus on shipping. No matter what you think of CiviCRM today, you are almost sure that there will be a newer and better version in a few months.

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Guillermo de los Santos

Administrator

Medecins Sans Frontieres Argentina

http://msf.org.ar

with the translation Spanish-English of the module and with the up-to-date upgrade of the modules e.g. peer to peer and campaigning

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Simon West

End-user, Administrator, Implementor

ZING

http://zing.uk.com

We feel there are too many obstacles facing not-for-profits (NFPs) considering commercial CRM offerings, including many of those that are charity oriented. From licensing models which restrict the fluid expansion of an organisation's user base (why should you be punished with higher costs for being successful?), to support from commercial companies being inherently tied to one supplier; a NFP would benefit from the option to 'shop around' for those most appropriate, e.g. based on: proximity and availability on-site, cost, experience, value added services... They also often lack the capacity for charity relevant workflows, necessitating either customisations, complicated and inefficient workarounds or an en-masse call for new functionality, as individual charities do not appear to carry the weight required to influence subtle NFP-only changes to market leading software, without large expense.

On the flip side, CiviCRM is completely free and open-source, carrying with it a friendly, hard-working and enthusiastic community of developers and implementers, constantly listening to the users' needs and sculpting future releases to the requirements of NFP organisations. This is exciting!

GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Jamie McClelland

DEVELOPER AND IMPLEMENTER

PROGRESSIVE TECHNOLOGY PROJECT

http://progressivetech.org
GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS
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Pablo Sullivan

Administrator, End-user

Movimiento por la Paz -MPDL-

http://www.mpdl.org

We needed a CRM, found CiviCRM and fell in love with it :). We're starting with 4.3, we hope we can be of some help for future updates.

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Home » Blogs » Deepak.Srivastava's blog

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CiviCRM 4.1.2 Release Announcement

Submitted by Deepak.Srivastava on April 19, 2012 - 05:31

CiviCRM team is pleased to announce the next stable release of version 4.1 - with support for Drupal 7, Drupal 6, Joomla 1.7/2.5, and Wordpress 3.3. You can download the release now from Sourceforge.

We strongly recommend that you upgrade a test copy of your site and review your critical workflows before upgrading your production site. There have been significant (~107) bug fixes since the first stable release of 4.1. You can also test-drive the release on each platform using the public demos:

  • CiviCRM 4.1 on Drupal 7
  • CiviCRM 4.1 on Drupal 6
  • CiviCRM 4.1 on Joomla 1.7
  • CiviCRM 4.1 on Wordpress

Please report any bugs or issues on the appropriate forum board (what to do if you think you've found a bug).

 

What's new (highlights)

Here's a quick list of some of the many cool and useful new features and improvements in this release:

  • Extended support for Drupal 6
  • WordPress 3.3 integration
  • Personal Campaign Pages for events - CRM-8534
  • Scheduled Reminders for events - CRM-8669
  • Social Networking plugins (Facebook "like", Tweet ...) for event and contribution pages - CRM-8737
  • Support for case custom fields - CRM-8508
  • Simplified Administrator menus - CRM-9059
  • Assign multiple contact subtypes and change subtypes  - CRM-8357
  • Consolidated cron provides a single interface for configuring the automated scripts- CRM-8358. Heads-up sys admins - existing cron jobs will need to be reconfigured.
  • Find duplicate contacts has been optimized when using the  reserved dedupe rule
  • Limit contact reference custom fields by group - CRM-8536
  • Unlimited Profiles for event registration forms
  • CiviReport - save report instance as a new report and permissioning by role - CRM-8562
  • Event info pages include links to configure the event, and to view registered participants - CRM-8707
  • Register, and Confirm buttons now appear on TOP and bottom of public event info and register forms

 

Want to learn more? Check out the complete list of new and improved functionality on the issue tracker.

 

Step up and help out with documentation updates

New releases provide a great opportunity to get involved in the CiviCRM documentation community. Many of the new and improved features in 4.1 are not yet reflected in the User and Administrator Guide, and Developer Guide. You can get an account to edit and update the books here.
 

Downloads

You can download the release from SourceForge. The filenames include the 4.1.2 labels, e.g. civicrm-4.1.2-drupal.tar.gz or civicrm-4.1.2-joomla.tar.gz or civicrm-4.1.2-wordpress.tar.gz. Make sure you're downloading the correct version: for Drupal or Joomla or WordPress.

 

New Installations

If you are installing CiviCRM 4.1.2 from scratch, please use the corresponding automated installer instructions:

  • Install CiviCRM 4.1 on Drupal 7
  • Install CiviCRM 4.1 on Drupal 6
  • Install CiviCRM 4.1 on Joomla 1.7/2.5
  • Install CiviCRM 4.1 on Wordpress 3.3

 

Upgrading to 4.1.2

The procedure for upgrading is described in following documents:

  • Upgrade Drupal 7 / CiviCRM 4.0 Sites to 4.1
  • Upgrade Drupal 6 / CiviCRM 3.x sites to 4.1
  • Upgrade Joomla Sites to 4.1
  • Upgrade WordPress Sites to 4.1 (from 4.1 alpha or beta)

We will continue to include automated upgrades for subsequent stable releases of 4.1 - so you should be able to upgrade your site easily over the course of the release cycle.

 

Contributors

Community support and engagement is the force that sustains and drives CiviCRM forward. This release would not have been possible without the incredible contributions of these people and organizations:

Adam Wight, Andrew Harris, Andrew Perry, Alice Aguilar, Andre Gurgel, Brian Shaugnessy, Coleman Watts, Dave D, Dave Moreton, Eileen McNaughton, Erik Brower, Erik Hommel, Henry Bennett, Jamie McClelland, Jim Taylor, Jonathan Mark, Joe Murray, Marianela Zucotti Bozzano, Michael McAndrew, Steve Colson, Stuart Gaston, Tim Otten, Tom Kirkpatrick, Xavier Dutoit.

AGH Strategies, Amigos Library Services, Association for Learning Technology, Attendee Management, Benton Consulting, Circle Interactive, CivicActions, Community Builders, EE-atWork, Fuzion (NZ), Giant Rabbit, Kindling Trust, Korlon, International Mountain Biking Association, International Society for Bayesian Analysis, Josiesque Designs, Michigan Parents for Schools, New York State Senate, Nonprofit Association of Oregon, Nonprofit Solutions, Powered by Action, Progressive Technology Project, Resolutions Northwest, River Pool at Beacon, Rooty Hollow, San Francisco Baykeeper, Scotland's Colleges, Switchback, System Seed, Tech to the People, The San Francisco Orff-Schulwerk, Third Sector Design, Voluntary Action Westminster, Vpod Schweiz, Woven.

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CIVICRM


GROWING AND SUSTAINING RELATIONSHIPS

WHAT IS CIVICRM
  • Community
  • Case Studies
  • Experts
  • Contributors
  • Core Team
  • Licensing
  • Contact Us
WILL CIVICRM MEET YOUR NEEDS?
  • Contacts
  • Contributions
  • Communications
  • Peer-To-Peer Fundraisers
  • Advocacy Campaigns
  • Events
  • Members
  • Reports
  • Case Management
GET STARTED
  • Evaluate Your CRM Needs
  • Evaluate CiviCRM Features
  • Read Books
  • Documentation
  • Demo CiviCRM
  • Download CiviCRM
  • Download Extensions
  • Find An Expert
PARTICIPATE
  • Join the CiviCRM Community
  • Read Our Blog
  • Community Forum
  • Attend a Training or Meetup
  • Make It Happen
  • Become A CiviCRM Developer
  • Issue Tracker
  • Help with Documentation
  • Translate