Part of an Australian survey on motivation of volunteers to work for non-profit organisations like Red Cross, State Emergency Service, Rural Fire Service, Surf Life Saving, Rotary, Parents and Citizens Associations, etc..
data(volunteers)
A data frame with 1415 observations on the following 21 variables: age and gender of respondents plus 19 binary motivation items (1 applies/ 0 does not apply).
GENDER
Gender of respondent.
AGEG
Age group, a factor with categorized age of respondents.
meet.people
I can meet different types of people.
no.one.else
There is no-one else to do the work.
example
It sets a good example for others.
socialise
I can socialise with people who are like me.
help.others
It gives me the chance to help others.
give.back
I can give something back to society.
career
It will help my career prospects.
lonely
It makes me feel less lonely.
active
It keeps me active.
community
It will improve my community.
cause
I can support an important cause.
faith
I can put faith into action.
services
I want to maintain services that I may use one day.
children
My children are involved with the organisation.
good.job
I feel like I am doing a good job.
benefited
I know someone who has benefited from the organisation.
network
I can build a network of contacts.
recognition
I can gain recognition within the community.
mind.off
It takes my mind off other things.
Melanie Randle and Sara Dolnicar. Not Just Any Volunteers: Segmenting the Market to Attract the High-Contributors. Journal of Non-profit and Public Sector Marketing, 21(3), 271-282, 2009.
Melanie Randle and Sara Dolnicar. Self-congruity and volunteering: A multi-organisation comparison. European Journal of Marketing, 45(5), 739-758, 2011.
Melanie Randle, Friedrich Leisch, and Sara Dolnicar. Competition or collaboration? The effect of non-profit brand image on volunteer recruitment strategy. Journal of Brand Management, 20(8):689-704, 2013.