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Optimal Targeting in Fundraising: A Causal Machine-Learning Approach

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  • Tobias Cagala
  • Ulrich Glogowsky
  • Johannes Rincke
  • Anthony Strittmatter

Abstract

Ineffective fundraising lowers the resources charities can use to provide goods. We combine a field experiment and a causal machine-learning approach to increase a charity's fundraising effectiveness. The approach optimally targets a fundraising instrument to individuals whose expected donations exceed solicitation costs. Our results demonstrate that machine-learning-based optimal targeting allows the charity to substantially increase donations net of fundraising costs relative to uniform benchmarks in which either everybody or no one receives the gift. To that end, it (a) should direct its fundraising efforts to a subset of past donors and (b) never address individuals who were previously asked but never donated. Further, we show that the benefits of machine-learning-based optimal targeting even materialize when the charity only exploits publicly available geospatial information or applies the estimated optimal targeting rule to later fundraising campaigns conducted in similar samples. We conclude that charities not engaging in optimal targeting waste significant resources.

Suggested Citation

  • Tobias Cagala & Ulrich Glogowsky & Johannes Rincke & Anthony Strittmatter, 2021. "Optimal Targeting in Fundraising: A Causal Machine-Learning Approach," Papers 2103.10251, arXiv.org, revised Sep 2021.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2103.10251
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    3. Takanori Ida & Takunori Ishihara & Koichiro Ito & Daido Kido & Toru Kitagawa & Shosei Sakaguchi & Shusaku Sasaki, 2021. "Paternalism, Autonomy, or Both? Experimental Evidence from Energy Saving Programs," Papers 2112.09850, arXiv.org.
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    5. Strittmatter, Anthony, 2023. "What is the value added by using causal machine learning methods in a welfare experiment evaluation?," Labour Economics, Elsevier, vol. 84(C).
    6. Feine, Gregor & Groh, Elke D. & von Loessl, Victor & Wetzel, Heike, 2023. "The double dividend of social information in charitable giving: Evidence from a framed field experiment," Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics (formerly The Journal of Socio-Economics), Elsevier, vol. 103(C).

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