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question:Generate response to the question/instruction based on a piece of given material Question/Instruction: What is the role of girls in the Movember campaign, and how do they contribute to fundraising efforts? Given material: Movember cofounder Adam Garone describes how to grow a massive charitable community by bringing the fun. Adam Garone never thought a silly beer-fueled bet to grow a mustache would turn into a multi-million-dollar global charity and the largest non-governmental funder of prostate cancer research. Seven years later, Movember expects more than 600,000 men to ask their friends to contribute donations in exchange for growing an artful caterpillar lip in the annual Movember mustache challenge, which starts Nov. 1. “The main driver for people participating in Movember is because it’s fun,” says cofounder Garone, who has meticulously trimmed guilt-laden messages from their campaign in favor of irreverence, a slick barbershop-style web design, and two blow-out parties that bookend the month. As Movember has grown from a hobby to a movement, Garone says he’s learned to create out-of-the box evangelizing strategies for Movember newbies or cut large checks without personally overseeing performance. Indeed, Movember packs in all the trimmings of a good time. The fundraising website is a sea of silly profile pictures (like from the 2010 Mo Mo Award winner, pictured here, who sports a neon pink mustache). The annual “Moscars” YouTube video competition garners some impressively professional-looking submissions from eager shavers looking to win the top prize of premium razors. In addition to about 60 official parties hosted around the world, Movember supplied around 10,000 MoBros and MoSistas last year with a party in a box, complete with award sashes and prizes to honor the most dedicated and creative mustaches. Behind its party-hearty exterior, Movember has created a sophisticated, organized process that makes messaging and coordination easy for participants. Despite the popularity of social media, Garone estimates that 75% of team donors are recruited through email. “We spend a lot of time trying to make everyone’s life when they’re participating in Movember as simple as possible,” says Garone, who designed Movember.com for easy integration with social media, lots of downloadable content, and, perhaps, most important, scripted letters to help participants ask for donations via email. The central website serves as a all-in-one dashboard for coordinating activity: Participants can organize teams of fundraisers, style their “Mo Space” with clever pictures and jokes, demonstrate their fundraising progress, and encourage supporters to share the campaign for social media friends. “For us, it’s all about participation, and really the funds come off the back of participation,” says Garone, who says Movember prioritizes the volume of members over concentrating on big fundraisers or celebrities. An estimated 30% of peach-fuzzed participants won’t even raise a single dollar, and Movember is explicit about not coercing them into minimum fundraising goals. The all-inclusive approach has discovered an unexpected gold mine: girls. “While it’s a masculine brand, the girls are actually the most important part of this, because they make up a majority of the team captains and 65% of the donors,” Garone said. Girls, for obvious physiological reasons, can’t chase the Movember dream of matching Hulk Hogan’s famous trucker ‘stach. But they can participate as “captains” who help organize and spread the word about fundraising. The web strategy has been so successful that it has caught the attention of Google, which just released a brand-new commercial with Movember as the star. As one of the biggest prostate cancer funders in the world, Movember’s mission is maturing into one of industry-wide influence, outlined in their Global Action Plan. “The biggest learning,” Garone says, was not to simply cut checks to cancer foundations. “We’ve taken far, far more control,” he says, in the hands-on management and influence of Movember’s sizable purse. Like other mega-philanthropists we’ve written about, Garone wants researchers and organizations to work collaboratively. “Movember is absolutely uniquely placed to smash up the rules and bring them all together,” he says. Author Greg Ferenstein is taking the Movember dive! Follow him as he grows his first mustache.

answer:Girls play an important role in the Movember campaign as they make up a majority of the team captains and 65% of the donors. While they cannot participate in growing mustaches, they contribute to fundraising efforts by helping to organize and spread the word about the campaign. Movember's cofounder, Adam Garone, emphasizes the importance of making participation in the campaign as simple as possible for everyone, including creating an all-in-one website dashboard, providing downloadable content, and scripting letters to help participants ask for donations via email. The Movember campaign is successful in part due to its fun and irreverent nature, which encourages participation and helps to bring attention to the cause of prostate cancer research.

question:Can you provide more details on the out-of-the-box evangelizing strategies that the Movember campaign uses, as mentioned in the given material?

answer:The given material doesn't provide specific examples of the Movember campaign's out-of-the-box evangelizing strategies, but it does mention that as the campaign has grown from a hobby to a movement, its cofounder Adam Garone has learned to create such strategies for Movember newbies. Movember's strategy seems to revolve around making participation in the campaign as fun and easy as possible, with a focus on building a community of fundraisers who can easily organize teams and share the campaign for social media friends. The campaign also uses various elements of gamification and competition, such as the annual "Moscars" YouTube video competition and the award sashes and prizes given to the most dedicated and creative mustaches. These strategies help to create a sense of excitement and energy around the campaign, encouraging participation and helping to raise awareness and funds for prostate cancer research.

question:Can you tell me more about Movember's approach to fundraising and how they prioritize participation over concentrating on big fundraisers or celebrities, as mentioned in the given material?

answer:The given material talks about how Movember prioritizes participation over focusing on big fundraisers or celebrities. The Movember campaign is designed to be easily accessible to anyone who wants to participate, regardless of their fundraising abilities, with an estimated 30% of participants not raising a single dollar. The campaign also explicitly does not coerce participants into meeting minimum fundraising goals. Movember's cofounder Adam Garone emphasizes that the campaign is all about participation and that fundraising comes off the back of participation. Instead of focusing on big fundraisers or celebrities, Movember prioritizes the volume of members and encourages anyone who wants to be involved to join a team, grow a mustache, and ask friends and family to contribute donations. The campaign also helps to make fundraising as simple as possible for participants by designing the Movember.com website for easy integration with social media, lots of downloadable content, and scripted letters to help participants ask for donations via email. Overall, Movember's approach to fundraising seems to emphasize the importance of building a community of fundraisers who are passionate about the cause of prostate cancer research and are committed to raising awareness and funds through their participation in the annual Movember mustache challenge.

question:Can you give me some examples of the silly profile pictures on the Movember fundraising website that you mentioned in the given material?

answer:The given material mentions that the Movember fundraising website features a sea of silly profile pictures. While there are likely many different examples of these pictures, the material specifically mentions a 2010 Mo Mo Award winner whose picture features a neon pink mustache. The Mo Mo Awards are an annual competition within the Movember campaign that honors participants with the most creative and impressive mustaches. Other examples of silly Movember profile pictures might include participants with unusually shaped or styled mustaches or participants wearing funny costumes or accessories alongside their mustaches. The emphasis on fun and creativity is an important part of the Movember campaign's approach to fundraising, helping to encourage participation and raise awareness about prostate cancer research in a lighthearted way.

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