An increase from 3 to 4 stars on Charity Navigator can be associated with a 6% rise in contributions. For smaller charities, the impact can be as much as 11%. That’s not too surprising but what about when ratings drop? According to new research, there’s no impact on contributions.
“There seems to be this asymmetric effect,” said Jennifer Mayo, a Ph.D. student at the University of Michigan and author of Navigating the Notches.Charity Responses to Ratings. Some charities respond to incentives by changing behavior to try to get themselves above the star thresholds, which leads to “bunching.” Mayo explains more about that and what fields that’s more likely to occur during this episode of Fresh Research. “You always see this tradeoff between how much you want to incentive the organization or person to improve their score versus how many people are facing that incentive,” she said.
“It came through to us as a data point for helping us with the evaluation and unification of those rating systems,” said Kevin Scally, chief relationship officer. “The notched system does have benefits to nonprofits as well as users.
“Her analysis of the notched system, particularly the bunching, is really going to help us inform how we can incentive performance of the nonprofits,” Laura Andes, vice president of impact ratings for Charity Navigator, said.“She gave us clues on how we can more effectively do that as we move forward. Who is most incentivized, and it’s not everyone; some sectors more than others.”
Some 80% of donations through Charity Navigator’s Giving Basket go to organizations with 3 and 4 stars, according to Scally.
According to Woodrow Rosenbaum, that’s up to nonprofits. “We’ve been handed an opportunity. It’s not often that you have an industry that’s had a multi-year trend that just suddenly turns positive,” the chief data officer for Giving Tuesday said in this bonus episode of the Fresh Research podcast. “Whether that becomes a positive legacy of this crisis, depends on what we do now. How we engage them now, in this absolutely critical time, is going to be the difference between preserving this shift and going back to a declining donor base.
#GivingTuesday was the single biggest day for donor acquisition in 2020, with Dec. 1 showing the highest percentage of donors acquired across all cause areas, according to Rosenbaum. Donor acquisition was up, there were more donors in the system, and multi-year trends for contractions reversed.
“There’s a really pervasive scarcity mentality in the nonprofit sector and it’s really harmful and most of all because the data do not support it. The giving economy is lot more elastic than people realize. #GivingTuesday is one example of the potential to get more and not have it cannibalize other giving,” he said. “As soon as you release yourself from this fear of competition and this scarcity mentality, it opens up all kinds of opportunities to engage and to re-engage. Donors aren’t tired of giving but that doesn’t mean they’re not tired of your message.”
Whole Whale predicts that this year’s #GivingTuesday will surpass $3 billion for the first time. Using analysis that includes trends in Google Search terms, national giving trends, and adjusted linear regression, the digital consultancy to nonprofits estimates that $3.048 billion will be raised on #GivingTuesday, which would be 27%, or $648 million, more than the 2020 total.
Episode 46: The 2021 NPT 100
Nov 16, 2021
MacKenzie Scott’s billions of dollars in mega gifts and American donors’ response to the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) fueled the largest charities in the United States last year.
The 2021 NPT 100 ranks the largest nonprofits in the U.S. that derive at least 10% of total revenue from public support. Colleges and universities are not included in the study and neither are donor-advised funds (DAF).
Jacob Harold
Jacob Harold, executive vice president of Candid, joins the discussion in this episode to talk about the 2020 numbers and what it could mean for charities moving forward. Candid helps provide data for The NPT 100. Also playing a part in this year’s report were Grant Thornton, which helps to compile and analyze the data, and Data Axle, which designed the charts that appear in the November print edition.
“How is it that during a crisis like this, the sector as a whole, or at least this group as a whole, was able to come away with not having to dip into reserves, ultimately, actually strengthening balance sheets,” Harold said during the conversation. “I think that’s a question that has a number of different dimensions to it that we should explore.”
Total revenue was an estimated $79.88 billion, an increase of 3% from the previous year for these 100 organizations but public support was up more than 6% to $48.568 billion. Other revenues that increased were government, almost 15% to $10.919 billion, and investment income, 11.2% to $3.327 billion. Program service revenue took a 12% hit, down to $14.65 billion. Other revenue declined almost 9%, to $2.471 billion.
GiveDirectly (No. 70, $306.216 million) in New York City, the Atlanta-based CDC Foundation (No. 86, $255.483 million) and Second Harvest Heartland (No. 94, $236.949 million) in Brooklyn Park, Minn., were among the fastest-growing nonprofits from 2019 to 2020. All three organizations ranked in the NPT 100 for the first time. Other nonprofits that returned to the top 100 after an absence included New York-based organizations Sesame Workshop (No. 89, $246.073 million) and Robin Hood (No. 97, $220.093 million).
Episode 45: The Charitable Tax Deduction & Civic Engagement
Oct 21, 2021
The refundable tax credit would be equal to 90% of their contributions, capped at $500. It would apply for donations to 501(c)(3) nonprofits — but also 501(c)(4) social welfare organizations, which currently are not eligible for deductible contributions. In 2018, the most recent year for which data are available, the national median AGI was $43,614. That year, 87.4% of taxpayers claimed the standard deduction while 11.4% of taxpayers claimed itemized deductions.
“We’re trying to make the taxpayer incentivized to think about their local organizations that they either have used in the past or are familiar with because I think there’s a good portion of people in our community who have never considered potentially donating to their local organizations because theres’s a lack of resources, or money is tight,” Hopkins said on this episode of the Fresh Research podcast. “But if you provide this incentive to everybody, then all of a sudden, you create sort of a whole new class of donor,” he said.
“Now all of a sudden, they have the the ability to make contribution to these organizations and maybe it’s organizations that have helped them in the past. And so I think one of the beautiful aspects of this is, is the idea of transforming a recipient or a client of a local nonprofit into an actual donor of it. And the idea that they would get involved in the operations and just provide a level of support and feedback that I think a lot of these organizations don’t see.”
Episode 44: Regulating CEO Pay
Sep 15, 2021
When the Nonprofit Revitalization Act passed in 2013, it was the first major overhaul of nonprofit regulations in New York State in 40 years. The legislation modernized rules around nonprofit boards and committees and, among other things, prohibited nonprofit officers from being present at meetings where their pay is discussed.
They examined tax data for almost 1,700 nonprofits in New York State and found that from 2009 to 2017, average compensation for the chief executive officer (CEO) dropped by 2% to 3% after the act went into effect. Despite earning less than they might have expected, CEOs spent 2% more time working without additional turnover, according to the research.
Rik Sen
At the same time, nonprofit performance improved in terms of larger contributions, more volunteers and bigger revenues. Nonprofits also were more likely to set up a compensation committee, perform independent compensation review, or adjust pay to be in line with peer organizations. The legislation, authors argue, reduced the fraction of “compromised boards” among New York’s nonprofits.
“Overall, our results suggest that regulation that targets the pay-setting process can be effective at improving organizational outcomes at nonprofits.“
The average nonprofit in the research has seven executives, reports $265 million in total assets and $129 million in revenue and some 600 volunteers. Average CEO pay was an estimated $600,000 while median CEO compensation was $350,000.
Episode 43: Checking Out Charity
Aug 18, 2021
You finish up your shopping and the cashier asks, “Would you like to donate to a local charity?” Do you give? If you do, how much? Or maybe they ask you, would you like to round up your total to donate the difference? Those are some of the scenarios in a recent experiment.
Results of that experiment are found in Checking Out Charity: A Study of Point-Of-Sale Donation Campaigns, by Adrienne Sudbury and Christian Vossler. Sudbury is a professor at the College of Business and Economics at Longwood University in Farmville, Va. Vossler is an economics professor at the Haslam College of Business at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.
Adrienne Sudbury
Individuals were presented with three different ways to make a donation at checkout: a fixed amount, a rounding request, and an open-ended ask. “With open-ended, you definitely have much lower rates. What we theorize is there’s some sort of cognitive cost going on, where people have to decide actually how much to donate under that scenario,” Sudbury said on this episode of Fresh Research. “With the fixed request amount and giving people a binary choice, you limit the potential donation. There’s pros and cons because if you only ask someone for $1 but they were willing to donate $2, you’re missing out on some potential donation there,” she said.
The authors attribute some differences in donation rates to what they called “loose change effects” — where people are more likely to donate if they end up with less change. “The majority of people chose to give themselves less change through their donation amount,” Sudbury said. “Some gave the same amount of change but absolutely no one gave themselves more change.” That change adds up: More than $605 million was raised through point-of-sale (POS) fundraising campaigns in 2020, according to America’s Charity Checkout Champions from Engage For Good.