Charities & Not-For-Profit Market Research Insights And Findings
London-based Offices and Re-branding Seen as Wasteful for Charities, Survey Shows
July 2014
A study looking into the public’s opinion of charities has discovered that a large proportion see re-brands and London-based offices as a waste of money. Almost seven in 10 (69%) said that London-based offices would be an improvident way for charities… Read more...
Charity Given Lowest Spending Priority, Survey Shows
July 2014
The UK’s economic improvement may mean that, for some at least, their spending is set to increase over the course of the next year, but when asked what their increased spending is likely to go on, charity was given the lowest priority according to research… Read more...
Trust Levels for Charities Falls to 56% in April 2014
June 2014
Trust levels for charities have dropped 10% in the last year to plummet down to 56% in April 2014, compared to their May 2013 reading of 66%. The survey, conducted by Charity Awareness Monitor, with 1,000 16+ year olds in Britain, discovered that just over… Read more...
Survey Reveals That The Majority of Tory MPs Think Charities Should Not Be “Political”
January 2014
Research consultancy nfpSynergy recently asked 157 MPs in June and July what it meant for charities to be political for its report “The Politics of Charities”. Findings show more than three-quarters (78%) of Conservative MPs think it is a negative… Read more...
Charity Pulse Survey Reveals Improvement in Job Satisfaction
July 2013
In a recent Charity Pulse survey undertaken by Third Sector and Birdsong Charity Consulting, figures show that among fundraisers job satisfaction has risen a tenth (10%) in the last year, now totalling three fifths (65%) of employees who are satisfied with… Read more...
Market Research Shows Shard Protest Reached Over Half Of British Public
July 2013
A recent YouGov survey which followed the protest of six activists from Greenpeace, shows that the stunt of climbing the Shard (Western Europe’s tallest building) attracted the attention of over half (53%) of the British population. Further in-depth… Read more...
