COLLECTIVE GIVING
In Abundance: An Analysis of the Thriving Landscape of Collective Giving in the U.S.
New National Research Report from the Johnson Center, Colmena Consulting, and Philanthropy Together

Practiced in cultures all around the world, collective giving brings people together to pool their resources, including time, talent, treasure, testimony, and ties — often referred to as the 5 T’s. Groups like giving circles, SVP chapters, giving projects, and fundraising circles have long served as democratic and philanthropic learning hubs — bringing historically marginalized voices into philanthropic decision-making spaces, challenging preconceived notions of who is considered a philanthropist, and elevating members as integral actors in our sector’s efforts to advance diversity, equity, and inclusion in giving.

A new partnership between the Johnson Center, Colmena Consulting, and Philanthropy Together aims to find and survey collective giving groups in the United States to better understand the impact of giving circles across race, gender, and sexual orientation identities.

Together, we will explore the deep roots that collective giving has in communities of color and other marginalized communities and continue challenging the narrative around who is recognized as a philanthropist and what actions count as philanthropy.

Free Webinar: April 2, 2024

On Tuesday, April 2 at Noon ET / 9AM PT, the Dorothy A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy and Colmena Consulting, in partnership with Philanthropy Together will release In Abundance: An Analysis of the Thriving Landscape of Collective Giving in the U.S., a new research report that examines groups like giving circles, SVP chapters, nonprofit-led circles, and giving projects. Through surveys, focus groups, and interviews, researchers have captured the growth, diversity, and impact of collective giving in the United States since 2016. Be the first to hear insights from this new research! Join us as lead researchers Dr. Adriana Loson-Ceballos and Dr. Michael D. Layton, along with Sara Lomelin and Isis Krause of Philanthropy Together discuss the key findings of the report and take questions from the audience.

A Look Back: Collective Giving in 2016

The most recent landscape study of giving circles in the U.S. was produced in 2016. It found that there were 1,600+ active giving circles (GCs) with more than 150,000 people participating and that these numbers represented a three-fold increase from the prior study conducted a decade before.

1,600+
GCs in the U.S. in 2016
150,000
People engaged in GCs in the U.S. in 2016
$1.29
Billion given through GCs as of 2016

Looking Forward: A New National Study

Photo courtesy of Philanthropy TogetherAbout the Study

There has been significant growth in the popularity of and infrastructure available to collective giving groups since 2016, including the creation of the Global Giving Circle Directory. The combination of the pandemic and mobilization against racism has also prompted significant shifts in how groups operate and what they fund.

New research presents an opportunity to more accurately capture the contours of this evolving movement and the potential of collective giving across the philanthropic ecosystem for advancing equity.

Purpose

This research will be used to produce an updated national landscape study of giving circles across the United States and document the diversity of the giving circle movement. It will also help to:

  • Develop a typology of giving circles and other forms of collective giving
  • Deepen our understanding of the giving circle life cycles
  • Identify how host organizations can more effectively support and encourage collective giving

 


 

The 2023 U.S. Collective Giving Research Initiative is made possible with the generous support of:

W.K. Kellogg Foundation logo
 The Lodestar Foundation logo
 Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation logo
 Logo: Fidelity Catalyst Fund

 

with input from networks of collective giving groups across the country:

Logos of collective giving group networks, including: 100 Who Care Alliance, American Muslim Community Foundation, Amplifier, Asian American/Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy, Awesome Foundation, Community Investment Network, DMV Network, The Giving Project, Grapevine, Honeycomb, Latino Community Foundation, Learning by Giving Foundation, Network of Engaged International Donors, Philanos, Social Justice Giving Circle Project, Social Venture Partners, The States Project, and Together Woman Rise


About the Researchers

Photo of Michael Layton

Michael D. Layton, Ph.D.

Michael Layton holds the W.K. Kellogg Community Philanthropy Chair — the nation’s first endowed chair focused on community philanthropy — at the Dorothy A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy at Grand Valley State University. As a researcher, teacher, director, advocate, and consultant, he has worked closely with a mix of community philanthropy organizations throughout the Americas and brings to his position a nuanced understanding of the unique challenges and capacities of community philanthropy to act as a catalyst in promoting community-led development and in strengthening the local context for philanthropy. Dr. Layton has taught at both Wesleyan and Yale Universities, and also founded and directed the Philanthropy and Civil Society Project at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) in Mexico City, where he developed a groundbreaking research and advocacy program to understand and strengthen philanthropy and civil society. Michael is currently working with Philanthropy Together on a national landscape of giving circles to improve practice and enhance DEI in national reports of philanthropy. Learn More.

Photo of Adriana Loson-Ceballos

Adriana Loson-Ceballos, Ph.D.

Adriana Loson-Ceballos is a co-founder of Colmena Consulting, an all-woman & majority Black & Latina worker-owned cooperative of consultants, coaches, & change-makers working toward collective liberation by co-creating culture & practices that advance justice & holistic well-being in the philanthropic & nonprofit sectors. Adriana offers her services to clients as an evaluator or critical researcher. She is currently evaluating the LatinXCEL Fund of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, and recently closed out a multi-year evaluation for the Latino Community Foundation’s Latino Giving Circle Network. Dr. Loson-Ceballos is currently working with Philanthropy Together and the Johnson Center for Philanthropy on a national landscape of giving circles to improve practice and enhance diversity, equity, and inclusion in national reports of philanthropy. She designs evaluations and research that are participatory and rooted in critical theories, by bringing the “nothing about us without us” commitment from disability justice scholars to center community voices often ignored when determining the successes or challenges in collective action efforts. Learn More.

Preliminary Findings from the Research: We Give Summit

In this recorded session from Philanthropy Together’s We Give Summit, lead researchers Michael Layton and Adriana Loson-Ceballos share preliminary findings from the 2023 study and highlight some of the shifts we’ve seen in collective giving since the previous landscape study.

Watch Now on Vimeo

Let’s stay in touch!

Johnson Center Logo - Vertical

Sign up for the Johnson Center’s email newsletter to be among the first to hear when the new collective giving research is published, as well as news, events, and resources for nonprofits, foundations, and donors.

subscribe

Philanthropy Together logo

Sign up for updates from Philanthropy Together to learn how to connect with the growing collective giving movement.

subscribe