Episode
How Neuroscience Shapes Donor Decisions in Capital Campaigns
- Published
- Dec 16, 2025
- Duration seconds
- 2389
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Summary
Stories change how people think, feel, and choose to act, and the science behind that process has direct implications for fundraising success. In this episode of All About Capital Campaigns , Amy Eisenstein welcomes Cherian Koshy, vice president at Kindsight and a leading voice on the neuroscience of generosity, to explore how brain science explains donor behavior in major gifts and capital campaigns. Drawing from his new book Neurogiving: The Science of Donor Decision Making , Cherian shares research from hundreds of peer reviewed studies that explain how donors experience stories, make identity based decisions, and move from emotional connection to meaningful action. This conversation connects neuroscience with practical fundraising strategy, offering insight that campaign leaders, development staff, and board members can apply right away. The discussion opens with storytelling and brain chemistry. Cherian explains how narrative creates neural coupling, a process where the listener experiences the story at a physical and emotional level. This shared experience shapes understanding, memory, and motivation. Fundraisers learn why stories shape donor choices and how thoughtful language and narrative arcs influence how supporters experience a mission. The conversation then shifts to major and leadership gifts within capital campaigns. Cherian explains what happens in a donor’s brain when considering a significant commitment. Rather than focusing on affordability, donors connect gifts to identity, values, nostalgia, and legacy. Amy and Cherian discuss how campaigns succeed when messaging reflects who donors see themselves becoming and how the project expresses that identity through impact rather than square footage. Decision friction and generosity decay form another core…