
History
The Hunger Site was started by John Breen, a computer programmer from Bloomington, Indiana, in June of 1999. Originally a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation, the site became popular rapidly. Faced with increasing costs, Breen sold the site to GreaterGood, "a Seattle-based online shopping mall that gave part of its sales to charity" for an undisclosed amount in February 2000. In July 2001, following the dot-com bubble crash, GreaterGood ceased operations after losing $26 million dollars in venture capital. In 2001, CharityUSA.com, LLC, a privately held, for-profit company based in Seattle) assumed control of the company for one million dollars. CharityUSA owns and operates various click-to-donate-sites. CharityUSA currently claims that 100% of the website's sponsor advertising revenue is paid to the aforementioned non-profit partners, however, the company does not publicly disclose the amounts it actually donates or the salaries of its executives. In recent years, the site has moved from banner advertising into the marketing of merchandise, promising that each dollar spent results in donations equivalent to two cups of food.
Mechanics
Mechanics
According to Martin Lewis at The Guardian, The Hunger Site probably doesn't make money for every click, only on clicks to the sponsor's sites, and those clicks might be worth 30¢ each. Each click on the "feed the starving" button he estimates as worth 0.7¢, based on average click-through rates.The Hunger Site gets most of its traffic from the US.
Several websites were operated by GreaterGood in association with the Hunger Site but became defunct once CharityUSA.com bought GreaterGood, including The Child Survival Site and The Kids AIDS Site, both rebranded into The Child Health Site, and The Landmine Site, which raised funds to provide prostheses to people who lost limbs in landmine explosions. At present, CharityUSA operates a number of other benefit-to-charity themed advertising and shopping sites, including The Rainforest Site and The Breast Cancer Site.
Several websites were operated by GreaterGood in association with the Hunger Site but became defunct once CharityUSA.com bought GreaterGood, including The Child Survival Site and The Kids AIDS Site, both rebranded into The Child Health Site, and The Landmine Site, which raised funds to provide prostheses to people who lost limbs in landmine explosions. At present, CharityUSA operates a number of other benefit-to-charity themed advertising and shopping sites, including The Rainforest Site and The Breast Cancer Site.