Prayers for Profit?

Posted July 30th, 2007 by Char Lyn

Tell me your problems and I’ll tell you mine—at least that is what a new social network called PrayAbout.com feels like. The site bills itself as a “prayer service ministry that welcomes people of all faiths,” and gives them an online medium for requesting the prayers of others. The site is carefully constructed to be inviting and reassuring, providing people with a sense of doing good, but the requests for prayers are, as one would expect, stories fraught with medical woes, depression, family troubles, and unemployment. To make it a community, PrayAbout employees lighting candles the way digg.com uses member voting to “illuminate” prayer requests supposedly deserving of more community recognition.

In concept, the site is filling a social need, but to me it feels like a wolf in sheep’s clothing. While each member gets one candle for free, other candles are earned through 1) writing a popular prayer request, 2) lighting a candle for prayers that become popular, 3) getting other people to join the network. If you can’t/don’t want to earn your candles, you can purchase them with a real money “donation” (which the Boston Globe indicates are $5 per 20 candles). The money helps support the site, which is owned by Notati, a for-profit company that admits to using PrayAbout to experiment with “predictive market techniques, virtual goods, and community spam filtering.”

As a religious individual, I am frustrated that a company would seek to make a profit from people’s prayers, even if the profit comes later through re-use of the technology developed by donations toward site improvement. As a social marketer I am fascinated by the use of a social cause to improve a networking platform. What do you think?

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Entry Filed under: Online Communities, Social Media Marketing

1 Comment Add your own

  • 1. Alex Montana  |  February 27th, 2008 at 12:38 am

    Here’s another one similar, though is completely free:

    http://www.prayerit.com

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