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February 17, 2025

Nonprofits get more donations when they vary their Facebook fundraising messages—new research

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

When nonprofits use multiple strategies during their online fundraising campaigns, such as thanking donors for their support, telling the public about their missions and conveying how they are helping people, they receive more donations than if they stick to only one kind of post.

That's what I, a , found after conducting a with , a Scottish statistician.

We figured this out after analyzing data from 752 nonprofits that participated in , an online 24-hour fundraising event in 2015 and 2020. While reviewing the Facebook posts shared during those events, which have since been discontinued, we saw that these appeals fell into six categories:

We also considered the size of the nonprofits' budgets, what they do, how long they've been operating, their prior experience in online fundraising, the total number of likes their Facebook profiles have garnered, the number of posts they made during the fundraising events, and how many times these posts were shared. The impact of having a mix of fundraising messages was consistent regardless of these other factors.

In addition to determining that using different types of messaging works best, we found that when nonprofits frequently share messages of gratitude or that highlight progress toward their goals, they tend to raise more money than if they just ask for donations.

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Why it matters

, has found that when , they can encourage donations by engaging followers as well as their extended networks.

Taking the strategy our study supports—making different kinds of posts—could help nonprofits beyond simply getting more donations. We suspect that it may also . That is, it could make it less likely that donors will become so overwhelmed by the repetition of the same requests that they stop supporting a group they used to fund.

Online giving has grown in importance in recent years. It amounted to an estimated in 2023, the most recent year for which data is available. Social media campaigns are an , even though nonprofits still raise much more money through email.

What still isn't known

It's unclear how much of what we found is specific to Facebook. Had we examined fundraising data from , the results might have been different. We also didn't assess the nonprofits' other fundraising activities, such as how engaged their were in these campaigns, or the extent of their other strategies, such as .

We aim to conduct a future study that will look at both offline and online fundraising efforts to isolate the impact of social media posts on fundraising.

Provided by The Conversation

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Nonprofits receive more donations when they use varied Facebook fundraising messages, such as expressing gratitude, explaining their mission, and encouraging social media engagement, rather than relying on a single type of post. This approach is effective regardless of the nonprofit's size, budget, or experience. Frequent gratitude and goal-oriented messages are particularly successful. This strategy may also help reduce donor fatigue. The study's findings are specific to Facebook, and further research is needed to explore other platforms and offline efforts.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.