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Registering to Donate

Matej Lorko, Maros Servatka and Robert Slonim

CERGE-EI Working Papers from The Center for Economic Research and Graduate Education - Economics Institute, Prague

Abstract: Many charitable organizations invite potential donors to first join a registry before soliciting donations from those who have joined. Behavioral theories suggest that the choice architecture of registry enrollment can influence not just participation but also future giving. Some approaches may be relatively more likely to increase the likelihood of joining but reduce the subsequent propensity to donate and the amount donated, while other methods might have the opposite effect. We experimentally test four behavioral theories – overhead aversion, status quo bias, reciprocity, and moral consistency – in a two-stage donor engagement model. We find that (1) disclosing registry-related overhead costs decreases donations, (2) changing the default enrollment method (op-in vs. opt-out) does not affect enrollment nor donations, (3) targeting reciprocity by offering a small gift conditional on joining the registry boosts enrollment but not donations, and (4) targeting moral consistency by requesting an upfront contribution does not decrease the likelihood of joining the registry and improves charity returns. Our findings emphasize how subtle differences in early-stage donor approach design can influence longerterm fundraising outcomes.

Keywords: charitable giving; donor registry; overhead aversion; status quo bias; reciprocity; moral consistency; experiment (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025-12
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-exp, nep-mac and nep-nud
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