Hi friend,
We have been super busy here at Sister District Action Network (SDAN), thanks to many of you! As you may know, SDAN is the 501(c)(4) research and civic engagement arm of Sister District. We design, administer, analyze, and report the results of randomized experimental studies about voter participation, voter registration, and volunteer engagement. We also learn about the importance of state politics and policies through our book club. Read on to learn more about what we’ve been up to so far this year!
VOLUNTEER ENGAGEMENT RESEARCH
Recruitment and Confirmation Study
We ran a study to see if personally contacting volunteers could boost attendance rates at team events. In short, yes! Personally contacting volunteers to recruit them for events resulted in 168% more RSVPs and 177% more event attendees than just sending emails. Similarly, personally contacting volunteers to confirm their plans to attend an event they had previously RSVP’d for resulted in a 51% increase in attendance. So, don’t just send emails! Read more here.
New Year’s Study
We conducted a survey of our members in January 2019, which yielded valuable insights about our community. We found that personal factors like gender, age, race, and partisanship are not significantly related to volunteering with Sister District, but social factors like closeness with one’s team and personal investment in the social aspects of Sister District are significantly related to engagement. This suggests that the social bonds of team membership are really important in keeping folks connected to Sister District! Read more here.
VOTER ENGAGEMENT RESEARCH
Voter Registration Postcarding Replication
You might remember that we ran a large study with Voter Participation Center (VPC) in March 2018 to see if sending personal postcards to voter registration targets would increase the odds of folks completing their registration. We ran a replication study in September 2018, resulting in marginally significant results. This suggests that chaser postcards did increase the chances of returning the registration form, but that the magnitude of the effect is likely small. The results of the studies suggest that voter registration postcarding shortly after a voter registration effort does provide a reliable, small boost to registration rate. Read more here.
Voter Pipeline Analysis
We took a look at who voted in 2018, to see how many of the voter registration targets from our March and September VR postcarding studies voted. We found that people who received our chaser postcards and returned the VPC voter registration form were more likely to vote than people who returned the VPC voter registration form but didn’t receive our chaser postcard earlier in the year (though this effect was not statistically significant). Read more here.
GOTV Postcards
In fall 2018, we sent 7,700 postcards to voters in Pennsylvania and Michigan, to see if receiving a handwritten postcard encouraging the voter to vote might boost turnout. We found that neither GOTV postcarding experiment yielded significant results. However, there were several reasons this may have been the case, including issues with the representativeness of the sample and a very high rate of voter turnout overall, so this research should be replicated to draw firmer conclusions about the value of postcarding as a GOTV tactic. Read more here.
Relational Voter Turnout
In fall 2018, we ran a study in partnership with Dr. Katherine Haenschen at Virginia Tech to see if tagging friends on Facebook could boost voter turnout. Based on a simple analysis, we found that people tagged in a status that was supposed to elicit pride did result in a larger amount of voters than not being tagged, but the effect was not statistically significant. We are conducting our planned analysis and results should be available in September/October.
Friendraising Pilot
We ran a pilot study in early August to determine if sending fundraising emails for SDP candidates to friends and family is an effective fundraising strategy. Because the sample was small, results in the pilot did not always rise to statistical significance, but it appears that sending emails to friends and contacts with specific fundraising goals, asks, and deadlines generated more money from more people than emails with non-specific goals, asks, and deadlines. Friendraising works! We’ll be running a larger-scale study to get firmer conclusions soon. Read more here.
3-Wave Voter Education Postcarding
We ran a 3-wave voter education postcarding experiment earlier this year. Through this experiment, volunteers sent over 100,000 postcards to low propensity voters in MS, LA and VA! We will release the findings in the Spring of 2020 after we analyze who votes in 2019.
Please support our research by donating $10 to SDAN today!
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