Publication | Closed Access
An Experimental Examination of US Individual Donors’ Information Needs and Use
34
Citations
26
References
2013
Year
Tax-exempt OrganizationsOrganizationsPublic PolicySurvey (Human Research)PhilanthropyBusinessExperimental EconomicsIndividual DonorsEducationAltruismEfficiency InformationResearch EthicsExperimental ExaminationPolicy AnalysisUnited StatesFinancingAlternative DataSurvey Methodology
Abstract This paper adopts an internet‐based experiment to investigate whether and how individual donors use nonprofit organizations’ financial and nonfinancial information when making their donation decisions. Using undergraduate students in the United States (US) to proxy for individual donors, our results indicate that individual donors are more likely to acquire nonfinancial information, such as nonprofit organizations’ goals, outcomes, programs and missions, than financial information. Donors integrate nonfinancial information into their decisions as their actual donations are significantly correlated with such information. Our results also indicate that while individual donors acquire financial efficiency measures, including the program expense ratio and fundraising expense ratio, they do not seem to integrate such information into their decisions as their actual donations are not significantly correlated with the efficiency information. This study contributes to the nonprofit literature and research domain focusing on charitable giving and donor preferences.
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