Nonprofits’ Online Social Capital and Charitable Support

IF 1.3 Q3 BUSINESS
Young‐joo Lee, Jongmin Shon
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT Building online communities has become an important part of nonprofits’ stakeholder management, but there remains uncertainty as to whether nonprofits’ online communities have practical implications for organizational outcomes. This study examines the relationship between the size of a nonprofit’s online communities on Facebook and Twitter and the support for the organization in terms of individual donations and volunteer contributions. The analysis of the Cultural Data Profile (CDP), which contains information of nonprofit arts, culture, and humanities organizations in the U.S., reveals that the number of Facebook fans is positively associated with the amount of individual donations and full-time equivalent (FTE) volunteers. The number of Twitter followers is positively associated with individual donations, but not with FTE volunteers. Overall, the findings suggest that there is a close connection between nonprofit organizations’ online community building and charitable support and this link varies among different social media platforms.
非营利组织的在线社会资本与慈善支持
摘要建立在线社区已成为非营利组织利益相关者管理的重要组成部分,但非营利组织的在线社区是否对组织成果有实际影响仍存在不确定性。这项研究考察了非营利组织在Facebook和Twitter上的在线社区规模与个人捐款和志愿者捐款方面对该组织的支持之间的关系。对包含美国非营利艺术、文化和人文组织信息的文化数据档案(CDP)的分析表明,Facebook粉丝的数量与个人捐款和全职同等志愿者的数量呈正相关。推特粉丝数量与个人捐款呈正相关,但与全职员工志愿者无关。总体而言,研究结果表明,非营利组织的在线社区建设和慈善支持之间存在密切联系,这种联系在不同的社交媒体平台之间有所不同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
19
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