Knowing that a large people donate inefficiently and that because of scope insensitivity and other thinking errors/bias/heuristics, some organisations do well by (intentionally) being inefficient. What counts is not necessarily the relative impact of cost/impact but the absolute impact.
An example:
A transparent Organization 1 focusing on increasing the cost/impact uses honest advertising but low social reward incentives therefor is able to generate 300K dollar per year. Being very efficient, per 10 dollar, one lifeyear* is saved.
Equals 30K lifeyears* saved.
Another Organization 2 focuses on increasing the number of people contributing by using extensive marketing and storytelling. For example they offer the option to adopt children, or buy children toys, etc., which increases the emotional bond and social reward for the donor. This way, the organization is able to raise 1M dollar per year. The spending of the organization is much more ineffecient (by 60% compared to the previous), only for every 16 dollar, one lifeyear* is saved.
Equals 62.5K lifeyears* saved.
While being much more inefficient, the total impact is larger employing the strategy of Organization 2. So therefor Organization 2 fared much better than Organization 1.
*lifeyear is just an example, could be replaced any other metric measuring improved living or reduced suffering
From this thought experiment some could argue that it is equally (or maybe even more) important to focus on increasing the social reward, emotional bonding and ease of understanding ability of a donation, because it allows for more money being raised and more people actively donating.
Is there any research on this yet? Evaluating whether improving the cost/impact effectiveness is better compared to increasing the social reward and emotional bond to increase the total amount which will be donated?
What is more impactful in the end? What are your thoughts about that?
This does obviously not apply to government funding, but even there social reward could play a role in the sense, that the easier the cause and effect of funding can be shared and made public, the more likely there is extensive funding.
Thanks for your extensive answer and insight. What you are saying makes sense, especially the points of charities competing for limited resources and the fact that the best charities are many times more-cost effective. The latter makes it incredibly difficult to make the example of Organisation 2 work. Considering that the top intervention is over ten times more cost-effective than the average, focusing on cost-effectiveness seems to be the best choice currently! (imagining to increase the amount of people spending/amount of dollar spending by 900% is completely impossible, and if it would be possible, very counterproductive since charities compete for limited resources)
The link you shared is really helpful to me, thank you!
However I still think that research and insight towards "charity decision-making and reward" to increase the amount people spend for charity and the amount of people spending for charity can prove very useful, in particular to the cost-effective organizations.