FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 18, 2023
CONTACT: Clem Boyd
Infinity Concepts
(O) 724.930.4003
(E) clem@infinityconcepts.com
EXPORT, PENNSYLVANIA – Are donors more inclined to consider a fundraising appeal featuring someone who looks like them—sharing their race, ethnicity, and/or gender?
Grey Matter and Infinity Concepts dug into this issue in the newly released report Race & Gender in Fundraising: Exploring Potential Bias Among Evangelicals.
Researchers tested ad layouts showing children of different racial/ethnic backgrounds and both genders, using a technique known as monadic testing. Respondents were divided into four equal segments; each segment saw one ad, and their responses were compared with other segments. In this way, people are not directly asked to choose between supporting a boy or supporting a girl, for instance.
Race and Ethnicity
The national sample of 1,010 evangelical Protestants was shown the same ad, but the child pictured was either Asian, Black, Latino, or White.
“In a fundraising context, evangelicals do not find pictures of children of their own race or ethnicity more compelling than pictures of other races,” explained Mark Dreistadt, President and CEO of Infinity Concepts. “Nor do they find pictures of their own race less compelling. Race simply does not make a difference.”
“Black evangelicals found the ads substantially more compelling than others—no matter which child they saw,” Dreistadt continued. “Black evangelicals were less likely than others to call all the ads discouraging or easy to ignore, and more likely to find them hopeful, realistic, believable, and relatable.”
Boys and Girls
When asked to help children, race/ethnicity does not impact how compelling an ad is. But does gender make a difference? In a word: Yes.
“Men are slightly more likely to rate the ads with the boy as extremely compelling than they are to say this about the ads with the girl,” Sellers said. “Was this just a case of men favoring their own gender? No—women are even more likely than men to feel the ads with the boy are compelling.”
Those differences held true no matter whether the child was pictured smiling or despondent. This finding could have a significant impact on a fundraising campaign.
Takeaways
Regarding race and ethnicity, the report encourages fundraisers not to get caught up in stereotypes.
“What evangelical Protestants really want is to help people, not to help people of their own race or of any specific ethnic background,” Dreistadt said.
But what about gender?
“We would need considerable further testing to know whether the gender bias we saw would exist with images of different age groups, races, and types of organizations,” he said. “At the moment, however, organizations should not consider de-emphasizing images of females but putting forth images, stories, and information that make it clear their work is critical to males and females.”
Or, as Sellers put it, “When an apparent bias exists, ethically, fundraisers should do what they can to help correct that bias through education and communication, not pander to it in hopes of better results.”
To download a copy of Race & Gender in Fundraising: Exploring Potential Bias Among Evangelicals, visit infinityconcepts.com/race-gender.
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To schedule an interview with Mark Dreistadt or Ron Sellers, email Clem Boyd, Director of Public Relations, at clem@infinityconcepts.com or text or call him at 724.930.4003.