Reading Between the Lines: Social Contextual Influences on the Production of and Response to Charitable Appeals

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === This two-article, mixed-methods dissertation examines social contextual influences on donor and fundraiser behavior. It presents an extension of the Charitable Triad Model to conceptualize philanthropic behavior as a contextualized act in...

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Main Author: O'Connor, Heather Ann
Other Authors: Konrath, Sara
Language:en_US
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/26378
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-263782021-08-11T05:06:49Z Reading Between the Lines: Social Contextual Influences on the Production of and Response to Charitable Appeals O'Connor, Heather Ann Konrath, Sara Shaker, Genevieve Benjamin, Lehn Haberski, Raymond Catholics Charitable giving Fundraiser Philanthropy Pro-choice Teams Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) This two-article, mixed-methods dissertation examines social contextual influences on donor and fundraiser behavior. It presents an extension of the Charitable Triad Model to conceptualize philanthropic behavior as a contextualized act informed by the social context shared among and between fundraisers, donors, beneficiaries, and organizations. The first article extends research on how social identity shapes donor behavior. This work finds that people are more likely to donate when they share identities, experiences, or group affiliations with beneficiaries. However, donors make philanthropic decisions in the context of multiple—and sometimes incongruent—identities. How might this complexity affect philanthropic behavior? I apply an intersectional approach to consider donors holding two simultaneous yet seemingly incongruent social identities. Using interviews analyzed with grounded theory, I examine the philanthropic journey of twenty Catholic women who donate to pro-choice organizations and identify as pro-choice activists. I uncover a common process shared by the donors as they navigate their seemingly incompatible identities. Findings reveal implications for fundraisers seeking to understand donors and for organizations that address controversial causes. The second article uses an experimental design with professional fundraisers to test how the presence of a teammate affects the performance of a common fundraising task, that of writing a charitable appeal letter. A large body of research in non-fundraising domains finds that working in a team versus alone can positively affect performance and team members’ satisfaction. Further, new research finds that fundraisers who feel like they fit with their environment have higher satisfaction and retention. However, no known research has examined the role of the social environment in fundraisers’ crafting of charitable appeals. Using person-environment-fit theory, we randomly assign fundraisers to work in a team versus alone to examine how this affects their satisfaction with the task, as well as the content of the letter produced. Results suggest implications for the management of development teams. Overall, this dissertation provides evidence-based insights to improve fundraising practice. 2021-08-09T16:18:42Z 2021-08-09T16:18:42Z 2021-07 Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/1805/26378 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Catholics
Charitable giving
Fundraiser
Philanthropy
Pro-choice
Teams
spellingShingle Catholics
Charitable giving
Fundraiser
Philanthropy
Pro-choice
Teams
O'Connor, Heather Ann
Reading Between the Lines: Social Contextual Influences on the Production of and Response to Charitable Appeals
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === This two-article, mixed-methods dissertation examines social contextual influences on donor and fundraiser behavior. It presents an extension of the Charitable Triad Model to conceptualize philanthropic behavior as a contextualized act informed by the social context shared among and between fundraisers, donors, beneficiaries, and organizations. The first article extends research on how social identity shapes donor behavior. This work finds that people are more likely to donate when they share identities, experiences, or group affiliations with beneficiaries. However, donors make philanthropic decisions in the context of multiple—and sometimes incongruent—identities. How might this complexity affect philanthropic behavior? I apply an intersectional approach to consider donors holding two simultaneous yet seemingly incongruent social identities. Using interviews analyzed with grounded theory, I examine the philanthropic journey of twenty Catholic women who donate to pro-choice organizations and identify as pro-choice activists. I uncover a common process shared by the donors as they navigate their seemingly incompatible identities. Findings reveal implications for fundraisers seeking to understand donors and for organizations that address controversial causes. The second article uses an experimental design with professional fundraisers to test how the presence of a teammate affects the performance of a common fundraising task, that of writing a charitable appeal letter. A large body of research in non-fundraising domains finds that working in a team versus alone can positively affect performance and team members’ satisfaction. Further, new research finds that fundraisers who feel like they fit with their environment have higher satisfaction and retention. However, no known research has examined the role of the social environment in fundraisers’ crafting of charitable appeals. Using person-environment-fit theory, we randomly assign fundraisers to work in a team versus alone to examine how this affects their satisfaction with the task, as well as the content of the letter produced. Results suggest implications for the management of development teams. Overall, this dissertation provides evidence-based insights to improve fundraising practice.
author2 Konrath, Sara
author_facet Konrath, Sara
O'Connor, Heather Ann
author O'Connor, Heather Ann
author_sort O'Connor, Heather Ann
title Reading Between the Lines: Social Contextual Influences on the Production of and Response to Charitable Appeals
title_short Reading Between the Lines: Social Contextual Influences on the Production of and Response to Charitable Appeals
title_full Reading Between the Lines: Social Contextual Influences on the Production of and Response to Charitable Appeals
title_fullStr Reading Between the Lines: Social Contextual Influences on the Production of and Response to Charitable Appeals
title_full_unstemmed Reading Between the Lines: Social Contextual Influences on the Production of and Response to Charitable Appeals
title_sort reading between the lines: social contextual influences on the production of and response to charitable appeals
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/26378
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