CORPORATE GIVING CAN ENCOURAGE CUSTOMERS TO GIVE TOO, CU STUDY
SAYS
Posted on July 13, 2004
Written by:
Greg
Swenson
Contact:
Donald
Lichtenstein
The old business adage that a company does well by doing good
needs adjusting, according to new research led by a University of
Colorado at Boulder Leeds School of Business professor.
The CU-Boulder researcher found that when customers see a
corporation as behaving in a socially responsible way, they reward
the company for its good reputation by buying more. And the good
feeling customers get from affiliating with the corporation can
extend to third parties, most notably the nonprofit organizations
with which the corporation partnered to create the perception that
it is socially responsible.
"If I were a nonprofit I would want to partner with a
corporation that has a good record of socially responsible
behavior, because what we show here is that not only will the
nonprofit receive support from the corporation, but its consumers
are also likely to give donations directly to the nonprofit," said
Professor Donald Lichtenstein of CU-Boulder's Leeds School of
Business, the study's lead author.
The findings are important, he said, not only because it is
crucial for nonprofits to benefit from these partnerships, but
also because the extent to which firms will be able to use these
relationships ultimately will hinge on the benefits the nonprofits
receive.
"While similar evidence with respect to corporate support has
been found in a controlled lab setting, we found it in an actual
field setting using real customers, real stores and real dollars,"
Lichtenstein said. "And for the first time in any study, we found
that customers also directly supported a nonprofit organization
that had partnered with the company."
The study will be published in the October 2004 issue of the
Journal of Marketing. Advertising Professor Minette Drumwright of
the University of Texas at Austin and Bridgette Braig, an
independent consultant in Boulder, Colo., were co-authors of the
study.
The study showed that being viewed as socially responsible is
beneficial because it makes the company more attractive to
customers through what is known as "customer identification with
the corporation." Ultimately this identification leads to
increased sales, according to Lichtenstein.
With this in mind, companies donate millions of dollars to
various nonprofit organizations through partnerships each year.
But while there is some research regarding the benefits to
corporations, empirical field research focusing directly on the
benefits to corporations is sparse, and there is almost no
research on benefits to third parties that align themselves with
these companies, he said.
Despite some obvious benefits, corporate socially responsible
initiatives can be particularly risky for nonprofits, usually the
less powerful partner, and may not ultimately end up serving the
nonprofit's long-term interests, Lichtenstein said. For one thing,
people might think the nonprofit doesn't need additional donations
because it is aligned with a big company.
The field study consisted of a survey of 508 grocery store
shoppers across four stores in two Colorado cities. Each shopper
filled out and returned a take-home questionnaire. The study also
involved three follow-up laboratory experiments.
The survey asked shoppers about their views of the grocery
chain to determine if they thought the company was socially
responsible, and to what extent they identified with the company.
For agreeing to take the survey each participant was given
coupons to either spend in the store or donate to various local
charities. Lichtenstein found that customers who perceived the
company to be socially responsible and identified more strongly
with the corporation were more likely to donate to the
corporate-supported nonprofits.
The follow-up studies involved marketing students from the
Leeds School of Business who were asked to respond to different
corporate promotions involving nonprofits.
One surprising finding from follow-up studies was that some
consumers are more likely to donate to a corporate-supported
nonprofit if the corporation has a weak historical record of
socially responsible behavior.
"It's always in a company's best interest to have a good
record," Lichtenstein said. "But if a company has a record of bad
social responsibility and they are trying to clean themselves up,
there are people who are more likely to give to that company. The
idea is they want to show support for a company that is trying to
change its ways. The public likes sincerity, so if you're honest
about it, people will give you a second chance."