Individuals in a mass market environment: Australian bequest donors seek better communication from charities


Autoria(s): Scaife, Wendy A.
Contribuinte(s)

Russell-Bennett , R

Rundle-Thiele , S

Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Swelling social need and competing calls on government funds have heightened the philanthropic dollar’s value. Yet, Australia is not regarded as having a robust giving culture: while 86% of adults give, a mere 16% plan their giving with those who do donating four times as much as spontaneous givers (Giving Australia, 2005). Traditionally, the prime planned giving example is a charitable bequest, a revenue stream not prevalent here (Baker, 2007). In fact, Baker’s Victorian probate data shows under 5% of estates provide a charitable bequest and just over 1% of estate assets is bequeathed. The UK, in contrast, sources 30% and the US 10% of charitable income through bequests (NCVO, 2004; Sargeant, Wymer and Hilton,2006). Australian charities could boost bequest giving. Understanding the donor market, which has or may remember them in their will is critical. This paper reports donor perceptions of Australian charities’ bequest communication/ marketing. The data forms part of a wider study of Australian donors’ bequest attitudes and behaviour. Charities spend heavily on bequest promotion, from advertising to personal selling to public relations and promotion. Infrastructure funds are scarce so guidance on what works for donors is important. Guy and Patton (1988) made their classic call for a nonprofit marketing perspective and identify the need for charities to better understand the motivations and behaviour of their supporters. In similar vein, this study aims to improve the way nonprofits and givers interact; and ultimately, enhance the giving experience and thus multiply planned giving participation. Academically, it offers insights to Australian bequest motivations and attitudes not studied empirically before.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/48748/

Publicador

Faculty of Business, Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/48748/1/_scaife_2011007863.pdf

http://www.icebergevents.com/insmconference/

Scaife, Wendy A. (2010) Individuals in a mass market environment: Australian bequest donors seek better communication from charities. In Russell-Bennett , R & Rundle-Thiele , S (Eds.) Connecting Thought and Action: proceedings of the 2010 International Nonprofit and Social Marketing Conference, Faculty of Business, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, pp. 177-180.

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Accountancy

Palavras-Chave #150000 COMMERCE MANAGEMENT TOURISM AND SERVICES #160000 STUDIES IN HUMAN SOCIETY
Tipo

Conference Paper