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The Ice Bucket Challenge may have raised funds but Nicola Lacatera says for most campaigns 鈥渢he ability to broadcast doesn鈥檛 have a big effect on action and real money鈥 (photo by Henry Huey via flickr)

6.4 million Facebook users, 30 donations 鈥 how 鈥榣iking鈥 lets us feel good about ourselves for no reason

You can feel proud 鈥渨ith the click of a mouse or the swipe of a finger,鈥 Nicola Lacetera says, but that won't save a life

Not-for-profit organizations throughout North America that were awed by the viral success of the ALS Society鈥檚 ice bucket fundraising challenge should think twice before using social media as a significant fundraising tool, says the 香港六合彩资料's Nicola Lacetera

A campaign may attract attention worldwide without prompting a big spike in fundraising or any significant action to further the cause, his latest research shows.

鈥淚t is true that once you rely on social media, your message can easily reach people by the millions,鈥 says Lacetera, a 香港六合彩资料 Mississauga management professor who also holds appointments at 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 Rotman School of Management and Department of Economics.

鈥淏ut then the question becomes 鈥榃hat do people do with these messages?鈥欌

Lacetera and two colleagues from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, reviewed longitudinal data about and conducted research into the success of Twitter and Facebook fundraising campaigns to determine whether they effectively lead to donations. Their results were published in the March 2016 edition of .

Reviewing the Data

The researchers first examined the success of an application created by Help Attack! to allow Facebook and Twitter users to donate to charities each time they posted or tweeted, with an upper limit for the total donation specified in advance. Potential donors had the option to broadcast their initial pledges and subsequent donations to their networks. About 16 per cent of the pledges were deleted before payment was actually required.

鈥淒onations make you feel good and look good, but do you actually need to donate to get those effects?鈥 Lacetera asks rhetorically. 鈥淵ou can do that just with the click of a mouse or the swipe of a finger by simply 鈥榣iking鈥 a campaign.

鈥淭he ability to broadcast doesn鈥檛 have a big effect on action and real money.鈥

About five per cent of the original pledges led to additional pledges from contacts, but the researchers were unable to trace the motivation specifically to the influence of online connections.

鈥淚f you and a friend donated, was it causal, or was it because you are similar in interests and preferences?鈥 he asks.

Reaching 6.4 million Facebook users, receiving 30 donations

Next, Lacetera and his colleagues used a series of Facebook ads and sponsored stories to encourage users to install an application and donate to a charity, Heifer International. One group of recipients had the ability to automatically broadcast their donations; the broadcast feature was disabled for the control group.

The campaign reached about 6.4 million Facebook users and had a click-through rate comparable to that of most non-profit campaigns. However, although the campaign received many 鈥渓ikes鈥 and 鈥渟hares,鈥 it resulted in only 30 donations.

photo of Lacatera鈥淎lthough there is plenty of visibility on social media, these platforms also provide cheap, alternative ways to express support,鈥 says Lacetera (pictured at right). 鈥淗owever, clicking the 鈥榣ike鈥 icon doesn鈥檛 save lives.

鈥淪ocial contagion tends to work when the activity you want people to do is free of charge, such as voting for their favourite movies. As soon as you add a cost, fewer people participate.鈥

Finally, the researchers surveyed 1,605 people, asking them to agree or disagree with various hypothetical statements, including 鈥淚f you were to receive $10, you would make a $5 charitable donation.鈥 In a third of the surveys, respondents were told to assume that the donation would go to the charity; in a third, the statement also noted that a percentage of the donation would go toward processing fees; the final third were told that a third party that would process the donation.

The survey led to a potential donation rate of 35 per cent, although the processing fee decreased the interest and the intermediary decreased it even further. 

鈥淎 social media giving campaign doesn鈥檛 necessarily lead to a donation as the next step,鈥 Lacetera says. 鈥淚n addition, the campaigns take a lot of work and cost money to run.

鈥淭he jury is still out as to how to get people financially involved. It鈥檚 an important and exciting challenge to figure out how to leverage the great power of these platforms for social causes.鈥 

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