Al-Ubaydli, Omar and Lee, Min (2011): Can tailored communications motivate volunteers? A field experiment.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_30343.pdf Download (436kB) | Preview |
Abstract
Over 25% of the US population volunteers. Clary et al. (1998) devised a survey that identifies a volunteer’s primary motive for volunteering. We investigate the effect of tailoring the communications that volunteers receive from their organizations (e.g., printed newsletters, update emails) to each volunteer’s stated motive for volunteering affects volunteer performance. We find that in general, such tailoring has no effect, but that for volunteers who are motivated primarily by the pursuit of career-related benefits, such tailoring can have a substantial, positive effect on hours volunteered. We also find that the (in)effectiveness of this tailoring does not depend upon the volunteers’ knowledge of the tailoring. The tailoring of communications does not involve the explicit manipulation of material incentives. This renders it particularly attractive given the emergence of evidence on how extrinsic incentives can crowd out intrinsic incentives, especially in the domain of charitable contributions.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Can tailored communications motivate volunteers? A field experiment |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | volunteering; charitable contributions; priming; stereotype |
Subjects: | D - Microeconomics > D6 - Welfare Economics > D64 - Altruism ; Philanthropy L - Industrial Organization > L3 - Nonprofit Organizations and Public Enterprise > L31 - Nonprofit Institutions ; NGOs ; Social Entrepreneurship |
Item ID: | 30343 |
Depositing User: | Omar Al-Ubaydli |
Date Deposited: | 24 Apr 2011 04:59 |
Last Modified: | 26 Sep 2019 12:20 |
References: | Bargh, J., R. Bond, W. Lombardi and M. Tota (1986). “The additive nature of chronic and temporary sources of construct accessibility,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 50, p869-878. Bekker, R. and P. Wiepking (2007). “Generosity and philanthropy: a literature review,” mimeo, Utrecht University. Benabou, R. and J. Tirole (2003). “Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation,” Review of Economic Studies, 70, p489-520. Benabou, R. and J. Tirole (2006). “Incentives and prosocial behavior,” American Economic Review, 96, p1652-1678. Brown, E. and H. Lankford (1992). “Gifts of money and gifts of time,” Journal of Public Economics, 47, p321-341. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2010). “Volunteering in the United States – 2009,” News Release. Clary, E., M. Snyder, R. Ridge, J. Copeland, A. Stukas, J. Haugen and P. Miene (1998). “Understanding and assessing the motivations of volunteers: A functional approach,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 74, p1516-1530. Cummings, R., S. Elliott, G. Harrison and J. Murphy (1997). “Are hypothetical referenda incentive compatible?,” Journal of Political Eocnomy, 105, p609-621. Deci, E., R. Koestner and R. Ryan (1999). “A meta-analytic review of experiments examining the effects of extrinsic rewards on intrinsic motivation,” Psychological Bulletin, 125, p627-668. Dijksterhuis, A., H. Aarts, J. Bargh and A. Knippenberg (2000). Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 36, p531-44. Duncan, B. (1999). “Modeling charitable contributions of time and money,” Journal of Public Economics, 72, p213-242. Freeman, R. (1997). “Working for nothing: The supply of volunteer labor,” Journal of Labor Economics, 15, pS140-S166. Frey, B. and L. Goette (1999). “Does pay motivate volunteers?,” mimeo, University of Zurich. Harrison, G. and J. List (2004). “Field experiments,” Journal of Economic Literature, 42, p1009-1055. Landry, C., A. Lange, J. List, M. Price and N. Rupp (2006). “Toward an understanding of the economics of charity: Evidence from a field experiment,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 121, p747-782. Linardi, S. and M. McConnell. (2011). “No excuses for good behavior: Volunteering and the social environment.” Journal of Public Economics, forthcoming. Menchik, P. and B. Weisbrod (1987). “Volunteer labor supply,” Journal of Public Economics, 32, p159-183. Mussweiler, T. and F. Strack (1999). “Comparing is believing: A selective accessibility model of judgmental anchoring,” European Review of Social Psychology, 10, p135-167. Sherman, J. (1996). “Development and mental representation of stereotypes,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 70, p1126-1141. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/30343 |