/
Surprising results - why was peer endorsement a turn-off fo Surprising results - why was peer endorsement a turn-off fo

Surprising results - why was peer endorsement a turn-off fo - PowerPoint Presentation

luanne-stotts
luanne-stotts . @luanne-stotts
Follow
418 views
Uploaded On 2016-10-15

Surprising results - why was peer endorsement a turn-off fo - PPT Presentation

Peter John 1 Recruitment leader endorsement Invitation to volunteer from a leader who is already doing the activity a politician celebrity another citizen May motivate on basis of modelling providing positive example ID: 476363

endorsement volunteering volunteer activity volunteering endorsement activity volunteer student endorsers endorser people politicians invitation endorsements effects action community treatment

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "Surprising results - why was peer endors..." is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Surprising results - why was peer endorsement a turn-off for students?

Peter John

1Slide2

Recruitment: leader endorsement

Invitation to volunteer from a ‘leader’ who is already doing the activity – a politician, celebrity, another citizenMay motivate on basis of:modelling (providing positive example)

legitimisation/ confirmation of quality of org/ activity leader self-sacrifice

Politicians have authority but effect of ‘anti-politics’? Many volunteers are apolitical

2Slide3

Research Design

An

experiment that assesses the impact of endorsements from people in different types of social positions on the decision to volunteer The idea is that potential volunteers will be influenced by endorsement in the form a request in which the endorser is cited as having undertaken volunteering activity themselves (‘do as I do’) rather than merely because the endorser recommends volunteering as a desirable activity (‘do as I say’

)

3Slide4

More on designF

ive participating universities with a total of approximately 100,000 students: UCL, Southampton, Salford, Exeter, Plymouth

A standard e-mail invitation to volunteers that went to all students, but with additional endorsement information included in the treatment messages from three different types of endorser.  

4Slide5

Treatments

Those in the control group receive a simple invitation from the volunteering unit at their respective university encouraging them to volunteer and sending them a link to the volunteering unit’s website. Those in the treatment groups receive a similar invitation, but delivered in the framework of an endorsement.

Treatment 1 informs the recipient about a politician who has volunteeredTreatment 2 concerns a celebrity volunteer; and

Treatment 3 conveys endorsing information about the activity of another student volunteer;.

5Slide6

Detail on endorsements

The individual politician and celebrity endorsers included in these messages are people who have been identified through internet research as having undertaken volunteering and were invited by the research team.Student endorsers

were contacted and their agreement to participate sought through the volunteering units. In order to avoid confounding endorsement effects with

organisation name or brand recognition effects, each endorsement will convey the type of volunteering activity undertaken by the endorser, e.g. volunteering for an organisation that helps the elderly, rather than referring to a specific named organisation.

6Slide7

More on endorsers

Endorsers not prominent or controversial personalities.Politicians were members

of Parliament, but not members of the government and selected from across the main political parties, although party affiliations were not be mentioned

The student endorsers selected from outside of the institutions in the study to reduce personal acquaintance effects. 

7Slide8

8

Dear *|FIRSTNAME|*,

We are writing to you directly from Community Action, part of the University of Exeter Students’ Guild, to invite you to sign up to our service.Anyone can volunteer and all sorts of people do, including national politicians like Gloria de Piero

, Dominic Rennie Raab, Andrew Percy and Roberta Blackman-Woods - MPs who support, develop and promote charitable projects, organisations, and causes. Everyone needs a break from the routines of student life, so why not try something enjoyable that can make a difference to other people too?

Visit the Community Action website to find out more:

http://www.exeterguild.org/doingthings/communityvolunteeringAnd registering with our group just takes a couple of clicks:

http://www.exeterguild.org/societies/community-action/

Volunteering is a great way to give something to others while gaining new skills and confidence, making friends and exploring career options. From one-off activities, to more extended roles, there is something for everyone.

We look forward to hearing from you!

Community Action, University of Exeter

In partnership with the Giving Time research project http://giving-time.org

/.Slide9

9Slide10

Monitoring outcomes

All invitations contained a link to the student volunteering service where students interested in volunteering register. There are two binary outcome measures: firstly whether the recipient clicks through the link contained in the

e-mail and registers with the volunteering unit, as a measure of intention to volunteer; secondly, whether the student takes up a volunteering role, as a measure of volunteering activity, based on information provided by the volunteering unit at the institution in question

10Slide11

11Slide12

Clickthroughs to UCL’s VSU website

12Slide13

% Clicks

13Slide14

14Slide15

15Slide16

Summing up the findingsEndorsements have no positive effects on click-throughs

to volunteering unitsStudent endorsements are negative, but would other kinds of endorsement work?Impact of politicians on uptake of trainingPatchy impact of celebrities

16