Which fundraising strategy is more effective and how donation behavior changes with different monetary amounts are still open questions. This study compares the effectiveness of two fundraising strategies—suggested donation and social information—and examines how different monetary amounts affect donation behavior. We implemented a field experiment on voluntary dona- tions among visitors to a national park. Both fundraising strategies affect donation behavior. However, the donation pattern differs significantly depending on the monetary amounts shown. Our findings provide important insights for designing fundraising campaigns and show how suggested dona- tion and social information affect economic behavior.

Suggested donation or social information? Evidence from a field experiment

Martinsson, Peter;Veronesi, Marcella
2026-01-01

Abstract

Which fundraising strategy is more effective and how donation behavior changes with different monetary amounts are still open questions. This study compares the effectiveness of two fundraising strategies—suggested donation and social information—and examines how different monetary amounts affect donation behavior. We implemented a field experiment on voluntary dona- tions among visitors to a national park. Both fundraising strategies affect donation behavior. However, the donation pattern differs significantly depending on the monetary amounts shown. Our findings provide important insights for designing fundraising campaigns and show how suggested dona- tion and social information affect economic behavior.
2026
1
19
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ecin.70060
donations, field experiment, natural park, public goods, social information, social norms, suggestions
Alpízar, Francisco; Martinsson, Peter; Veronesi, Marcella
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/2133330
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