Yelp Adds GoFundMe Donation Button for Struggling Local BusinessesLook for the "Donate" option on the web and in the app to help support restaurant, nightlife, beauty and fitness operators.

ByStephanie Mlot

This story originally appeared onPCMag

via PC Mag

Businesses forced to shut down or scale back during the COVID-19 pandemic are getting a little help from their friends at Yelp andGoFundMe. Independent operators can now launch fundraisers and accept donations directly through their Yelp profile.

Look for the "Donate" button on the web and in-app pages of restaurant, nightlife, beauty and fitness businesses for a quick-and-easy way to support your favorite establishments. As an added bonus, the Yelp Foundation and GoFundMe willmatch up to $1 million in contributions. Businesses must have a claimed Yelp page and five or fewer locations to participate.

"Many businesses have been required to temporarily close, making it seemingly impossible to continue to pay their staff and cover rent," Chad Richard, Yelp's senior vice president of business and corporate development,wrote in a blog post. "Fortunately, loyal customers want to help them weather this unprecedented crisis and are looking for ways to make an immediate impact."

Related:GoFundMe Creates Small-Business Relief Initiative for Companies Affected by Coronavirus

Organizations with an existing GoFundMe or that sign up through the firm's nonprofit can alsobenefit from the new Small Business Relief Fundwith Intuit QuickBooks, where people can help support the overall initiative. Until depleted, donations will be paid out as one-time $500 matching grants to qualifying companies.

"It's our hope that with the funds raised through this partnership, businesses will be able to support their employees and cover immediate expenses so that they're in a better position to continue operating through this crisis, or able to reopen their doors once we overcome it," Richard wrote.

The joint venture comes on the heels of Yelpannouncing a $25 million relieffor local businesses in the form of waived advertising fees and free advertising, products and services.

Wavy Line
Stephanie Mlot

Reporter at PCMag

Stephanie began as aPCMagreporter in May 2012. She moved to New York City from Frederick, Md., where she worked for four years as a multimedia reporter at the second-largest daily newspaper in Maryland. She interned at Baltimore magazine and graduated from Indiana University of Pennsylvania (in the town of Indiana, in the state of Pennsylvania) with a degree in journalism and mass communications.

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