I've worked with the United Nations Online Volunteer program before.<p>They basically have a "job" board for different categories of tasks that can be done remotely online including design, web site building, other tasks, etc.<p>It's not the easiest†, as many orgs might be overseas so working asynchronously is almost a given. Budgets for them are often next-to-none, but their service demands are usually relatively low.<p>I highly recommend giving them a look. There are a lot of great, small, un[der]funded organizations trying to help people in despair, impoverished children get a leg up, children in troubled homes meet new potential—all kinds—and they need the help because they can rarely afford to pay for it, but the ability to manage something like a website and blog that gives them increased exposure and ease of contact is a huge boon.<p>They also need online English teachers, researchers, project managers, writers, the list goes on.<p><a href="https://www.onlinevolunteering.org/en" rel="nofollow">https://www.onlinevolunteering.org/en</a><p>Tech options: <a href="https://www.onlinevolunteering.org/en/opportunities?f[0]=field_task_id:5" rel="nofollow">https://www.onlinevolunteering.org/en/opportunities?f[0]=fie...</a><p>† <i>edit: To clarify, many of the technical needs are relatively simple—though there seem to be some more challenging options appearing as well. The harder part may be effective communication and understanding—though the people I've worked with have always been great and understanding and just want to deliver the most because they're doing what they do precisely because they care. They're not getting rich.</i>