Storytelling In Fundraising: A Strategic Approach To Donor Engagement And Trust Building

dc.contributor.authorNinson, Jennifer De-Graft
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-18T12:43:20Z
dc.date.issued2025-12
dc.descriptionMA Thesis
dc.description.abstractThe primary objective of the study was to investigate how storytelling functions as a strategic mechanism for donor engagement and trust building within Ghanaian non profit organizations. To address this, a qualitative research approach was employed, utilizing an exploratory design to gain in depth insights into the practices and perceptions of key stakeholders. The study purposively sampl ed 25 participants, comprising fundraising professionals from GAPVOD registered NGOs and active donors, to ensure rich, context specific data. Data collection was conducted through semi structured interviews, and the analysis followed a thematic approach t o identify and interpret emerging patterns. The study found that fundraising professionals plan storytelling campaigns through a strategic process Centre ed on impact and ethics, audience segmentation and targeted narrative framing, the use of impact asses sment and relevance criteria for validation, and structured internal planning and coordination. The study found that professionals develop and execute storytelling initiatives through content development, review and validation, and multi channel disseminat ion. It also found that storytelling is integrated into broader fundraising by aligning stories with goals, building trust through transparency, engaging donors tactically, and maintaining consistent branding. The study found that donor perceptions are sha ped by narrative credibility, message clarity, and emotional resonance, and that specific stories influence trust through evidence, personal identification, and alignment with observable actions. The study also found that the qualities donors value for bui lding connection and credibility are authentic beneficiary voices, verifiable impact details, and a compelling narrative structure that shows transformation. The study found that storytelling reduces donor scepticism and builds institutional credibility th rough four mechanisms evidence backed narratives that address concerns, follow up stories showing progress, transparency about challenges, and alignment between promises and outcomes. The study also found that credible stories are built on four specific el ements: authentic beneficiary testimonies, verifiable impact data, consistency with organizational reports, and the ethical representation of beneficiaries. To strengthen the impact and integrity of Ghanaian non profits, governing bodies and sector leaders should develop standardized ethical storytelling guidelines that mandate the use of verifiable impact data, authentic beneficiary consent, and transparent progress reporting. Furthermore, donor agencies and institutional funders should incentivize and for mally recognize organizations that implement these credible narrative practices by integrating storytelling quality and consistency into their grant assessment and renewal criteria.
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.unimac.edu.gh/handle/123456789/1017
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUniMAC
dc.subjectKeywords: Storytelling
dc.subjectDonor engagement and Trust building
dc.subjectGhana
dc.titleStorytelling In Fundraising: A Strategic Approach To Donor Engagement And Trust Building
dc.typeThesis

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