Do you ever wonder if giving premiums or token gifts for
donations works? You know, offering labels on the front end as an incentive to
give, or a T-shirt on the back end as a bonus for giving? There's a lot of
controversy surrounding the issue. Here's what people have found and what the
research says:
Experience says yes
Without a doubt, organizations that use premiums do
experience an increase in giving. It worked for the Sierra Club. It also seems to work when converting regular donors
to a pre-authorized payment program according to Harvey McKinnon. And if you talk to nonprofits that use mailing
labels, they'll tell you they see much higher response rates with them than
without.
In fact, everyone who uses premiums seems to be a firm
believer that they work! But if that's true, then why does research say
something different?
Research says no
In 2011, Cygnus
Applied Research conducted a research study with over 22,000 donors in
North America. According to that study, giving premiums as an incentive for
giving or in response to a gift has an overwhelmingly negative impact on
giving. 77% of people surveyed had a recent experience of receiving token
gifts.
According to the study, "The overwhelming response was
negative to questions concerning whether donors appreciated premiums, whether
related or not to the work of the not-for- profit that sends them. As well, 63%
said they do not want to receive token gifts of any kind so that as much of
their gift as possible goes to the purpose for which they gave; only 18%
commented favorably."
In a personal interview, Cygnus president Penelope Burk warned that because
fundraisers only see the positive effects of giving token gifts (the 18% that
seem to like them and may give as a result), they assume it's working. The
problem, however, is that they cannot measure the negative effects (the
hundreds gritting their teeth in annoyance, thinking "this is what you spent my
donation on?").
What to do
So what's the deal? Do donors say one thing and then do
another? Or, are premiums really having a negative impact, leading more donors
than nonprofits realize to walk away?
What do you do when the research says no, but experience
says yes? It's difficult to know for sure, but the best advice is this: if you
do offer premiums, make sure they are optional. In an online forum a woman
admitted that "for years I gave $39 to my local PBS station, because if I gave
$40 or more, I would get a tote bag and I already had three!"
You don't want donors thinking you waste their
donations on premiums, especially premiums that they don't need or want. So the
simple solution is to just make back-end gifts optional. Of course for
front-end gifts the debate lives on. Until we know for sure what kind of impact
they have, you'll just have to use your best judgement. [Or test - Ed.]
This article was contributed by Sumac Fundraising Software. Sumac is giving back to nonprofits by offering its software free to organizations with fewer than 500 contacts.