The Theory
To attract more contributions, many donors offer large gifts that are contingent on other donors’ chipping in a specified amount. By using a matching gift, they hope to attract people who would otherwise figure that a charity doesn’t need their help if a major gift is already in hand. But matching gifts don’t always attract as many additional donations as a simple contribution does, according to a paper by two researchers at Texas A&M University.
The Test
Both cash gifts and matching gifts signal a charity’s quality to prospective donors, the researchers posit. When little information is available about a nonprofit — if it is new, for instance — potential donors look to leadership gifts to determine whether a charity is worth their contribution. Researchers have long concluded that matching gifts are more effective. But cash gifts with no strings attached have exceeded matching gifts in recent experiments. In a series of mathematical models, the authors sought to explain why such seed funding is so potent.
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